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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Journal of Environmental Media (Special Issue: ‘Seeing the (In)Justice of Sustainability: Visualizing Inequality at the Centre of Climate Change Communication’)
Mon Mar 15 13:56:27 GMT 2021
Call for Papers: Journal of Environmental Media
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-environmental-media>
*Special Issue: ‘Seeing the (In)Justice of Sustainability: Visualizing
Inequality at the Centre of Climate Change Communication’ *
Guest Editors:
*
Juliet Pinto, Associate Professor, Bellisario College of
Communications, The Pennsylvania State University, USA
*
Robert E. Gutsche, Jr., Senior Lecturer in Critical Digital Media
Practice, Department of Sociology (Media and Cultural Studies),
Lancaster University, UK
*
Tori Zheng Cui, Graduate Student, Bellisario College of
Communications, The Pennsylvania State University, USA
We know that environmental change due to massive global warming
negatively influences the world’s poorest and most-marginalized the
most, as do the corporate and collective actions themselves that drive
greenhouse gas emissions. With greater urgency, media scholarship – and
practice – must now turn to the wicked problems associated with forms of
human inequality that are sometimes linked to efforts to develop local
and global sustainability: racialized gentrification of urban areas to
form wetlands creates a forced migration of residents. The development
of environmentally sound (and expensive) housing pushes out the poor.
Mainstreamed media narratives of climate change activists elevate
particular people and parts of the world over others. And yet such
effects of sustainability are often invisible or missing from mediated
discourses and arenas. As notions of sustainability become more
normalized as key to our shared social futures, they can remain tied to
long-standing issues of racialized environmentalism shaping government
and corporate decisions, as well as individual and collective
interpretations of curbing climate change. ‘Climate change is the result
of a legacy of extraction, of colonialism, of slavery’, Elizabeth
Yeampierre, cochair of the Climate Justice Alliance, told PBS in the US
in 2020. ‘The truth is that the climate justice movement, people of
color, indigenous people, have always worked multi-dimensionally because
we have to be able to fight on so many different planes.’ We share in
this concern.
This special issue surrounds issues of sustainability and its effect
(and potential for effect) on widening inequalities and does so through
discussions on visual and digital communication, including, but not
limited to, digital photography, data visualizations, augmented reality,
novel apps, virtual reality, television and film, memes and social media
images, and digital and broadcast journalism. Such interrogation
highlights intersections of inequalities that complicate efforts and the
very definitions of sustainability, while building theory that
problematizes roles of visual narratives – and narrating – in the
digital age, particularly as mainstream media focus on only specific
aspects of sustainable future(s).
Indeed, the term ‘sustainability’ itself suggests a maintaining of
modern-day living conforms, consumption, and lived experiences and
breeds, therefore, questions about the peculiarities of sustainability
and how we ‘see’ them. Contributions with images are encouraged.
Articles for this special issue surrounding intersections of
sustainability and increasing inequalities might include:
*
Innovation of methods and modes of visually communicating
inequalities of sustainability in journalism, entertainment,
corporate communication, and VR.
*
The use of GIS visualization to map and monitor unequal forms of
sustainability initiatives within particular environments.
*
Interpretation of sustainability discussions and supplementary
visual evidence from graphics and data visualization through an
approach of STS.
*
Discussions around digital cultural studies and visuals in dominant
and problematic representations of sustainable living.
*
The elevation or exploration of ‘environmentalism of the poor’
through photojournalism or immersive mediums.
*
Social media memes and communication that elevate the visual in
discussions on sustainability and inequalities.
*
Interrogation of racialized forms of gentrification in the name of
‘sustainability’.
*
Avenues of understanding through data science to highlight
oppositional or subjugated positions and communities in forming
solutions to environmental decline.
*
Global perspectives on influences of cultural industries in seeing
and communicating sustainable social futures that involve interests
of justice.
*
Examinations of emotional and immersive media to promote
complication in understanding calls-to-action related to sustainable
living.
*
Examples and strategies for innovative technology use to form
citizenry and/or community activism to resist oppressive natures of
sustainable communication and capitalistic actions for the good of
the climate.
Abstracts of no more than 500 words for consideration should be sent to
Tori Zheng Cui at (cuizheng84 /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(cuizheng84 /at/ gmail.com)> by
1 July 2021. Articles selected for peer-review will be due 1 October
2021, should be 7000 words, and should conform with Harvard Style.
Questions can be directed to Tori Zheng Cui at (cuizheng84 /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(cuizheng84 /at/ gmail.com)>.
Read the full CFP here >>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/56582/1/JEM_CfP_march_21_2.pdf
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/56582/1/JEM_CfP_march_21_2.pdf>
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