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[ecrea] New book: Mediating Climate Change
Wed Aug 17 15:09:27 GMT 2011
Mediating Climate Change
Julie Doyle, University of Brighton, UK
Ashgate Series: Environmental Sociology
ISBN: 978-0-7546-7668-3 (hdbk) 978-0-7546-7669-0 (e-book) Order
online: £45.00
http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calctitle=1&pageSubject=417&title_id=8795&edition_id=11986
<http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calctitle=1&pageSubject=417&title_id=8795&edition_id=11986>
Climate change has been a significant area of scientific concern since
the late 1970s, but has only recently entered mainstream culture and
politics. However, as media coverage of climate change increases in the
twenty-first century, the gap between our understanding of climate
change and climate action appears to widen.
In this timely book, Julie Doyle explores how practices of mediation and
visualisation shape how we think about, address and act upon climate
change. Through historical and contemporary case studies drawn from
science, media, politics and culture, Mediating Climate Change
identifies the representational problems climate change poses for public
and political debate. It offers ways forward by exploring how climate
change can be made more meaningful through, for example, innovative
forms of climate activism, the reframing of meat and dairy consumption,
media engagement with climate events and science, and artistic
experimentation.
Doyle argues that cultural discourses have problematically situated
nature and the environment as objects externalised from humans and
culture. Mediating Climate Change calls for a more nuanced understanding
of human-environmental relations, in order for us to be able to more
fully imagine and address the challenges climate change poses for us all.
*Content:*
Introduction: making climate change meaningful
Part I Historicising/Theorising Climate Change:
Chapter 1: Problematising science and environment: conceptualising
nature, vision and time in the mediation of climate change
Chapter 2: Visualising climate change: negotiating the temporalities of
climate through imagery
Chapter 3: Coda: nature, vision and time
Part II Mediating/Addressing Climate Change:
Chapter 4: An emerging climate movement: questioning values of
environment, justice and faith
Chapter 5: Mediating Copenhagen: communicating scientific (un)certainty
and the political (un)urgency of climate action
Chapter 6: Sustainable consumption? Reframing meat and dairy consumption
in the politics of climate change
Chapter 7: Imaginative engagements: critical reflections on visual arts
and climate change
Epilogue: positive action in a changing climate
*Reviews: *
'This is an insightful volume that challenges us to unpack and
reconsider ways in which climate change becomes meaningful in our lives.
In particular, author Julie Doyle has insightfully explored how imagery
shapes our understanding, and how food consumption matters to mitigation
efforts. Overall, Doyle has asked novel and productive questions that
advance our shared considerations of climate and society.'
- Maxwell T.
Boykoff, University of Colorado-Boulder, USA
'How people think and feel about the idea of climate change influences
the way they evaluate and act on the facts of climate change. In
Mediating Climate Change, Julie Doyle examines this simple but important
proposition and explains why and how this can be. Doyle’s focus on the
multiple meanings of climate change, and how these can (dis)empower, is
a necessary correction to the inconclusive and tiresome arguments about
scientific (un)certainties which plague public debates. In so doing,
Mediating Climate Change contributes to a much bigger and more profound
project: reconnecting the human faculty of imagination and the material
consequences of human action.'
- Mike Hulme, University of East Anglia, UK
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