MapFutur.es is an online map that gathers fragments of imagined futures: “future screenshots”—speculative visions shaped as tweets, chats, maps, protest signs, or headlines. They’re not predictions. They’re provocations. They ask: what might still be possible? What futures are already taking shape in how we grieve, resist, and imagine?
The Futures Map is nonlinear. It’s organized not by time, but by resonance—emotional, thematic, spatial. It evolves with every contribution, forming constellations of hope, contradiction, and shared concern. These aren’t complete stories. They’re peepholes, sparks, and landmarks—meant to guide us through the fog of the present.
This is not speculative fiction from a safe distance. Many contributors have lost loved ones. These screenshots come from inside the burn zone, where imagining the future is itself an act of resistance.
The map was developed together with Adam Kariv and with support from the Albi fund and A Land For All—Two States One Homeland. The map was debuted in the Peoples Peace Summit in Jerusalem and later at the Imagining Futures exhibition in the Jewish Museum in Amsterdam.
Visit the map. Drift through it. Add your own screenshot. And above all, ask:
What room is there for me in your future?
