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[ecrea] Ecocinema audiences - a special issue of Interactions: Studies in Communications and Culture
Wed Feb 26 03:55:25 GMT 2014
Interactions: Studies in Communications and Cultures (Intellect)
Volume 4 Issue 2
Ecocinema Audiences
Guest editor: Pietari Kääpä (University of Stirling)
Far from reproducing appreciative odes to the nature sublime or
constructing ideological critiques of the exploitation of nature,
studies of ecomedia proliferate in scope and intent. Media ecologists
such as Matthew Fuller (2005) and Jussi Parikka (2010) provide complex
assertions of the media's material and social role in the world, while
interventions in materialist media studies by Maxwell and Miller (2011)
and Bozak (2012) encourage the environmental humanities to venture in
new directions. Drawing on Guattari's three ecologies (2000) of nature,
society and the mind, this materialist turn contributes much to
exploring the relationship between natural resources and the society in
which the media operate as well as the material realities with and
within which the media work.
While the three ecologies hold central roles in ecosophical debates by
Ivakhiv (2013) et al., the study of audience responses and their
material implications remain somewhat ignored in all this. Reception
practices are very much implicit in much of the work of media ecologists
as well as ecomedia scholars, but even as we outreach into the realms of
theory-becoming-material, we need to get a better understanding of the
different forms of impact the media have on their viewing publics. This
is not intended as a call for simplification of theoretical advances,
but as a means to ensure a place for thorough studies of audience
understandings and appropriations of environmental messages in film and
other media. Thus, while it is clear that audiences in general have been
a central concern for ecomedia scholars, the cognitive and
socio-political processes of reception are still not thoroughly
understood. Thus, it is necessary to consolidate these brief
observations into more systematic approaches to studying both
hypothetical and actual audience responses to environmental
communications, a concern this issue aims to address.
Contents
Understanding the audiences of ecocinema
Author: Pietari Kääpä
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Contributor,a=K/view-Contact-Page,id=35451/>
Ecocinema for all: Reassembling the audience
Author: Chris Tong
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Contributor,a=T/view-Contact-Page,id=35449/>
Towards a political economy of ecodocumentary
Author: Megan Selheim
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Contributor,a=S/view-Contact-Page,id=35450/>
Princess Mononoke and beyond: New nature narratives for children
Author: Benjamin Thevenin
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Contributor,a=T/view-Contact-Page,id=35447/>
Audience responses to environmental fiction and non-fiction films
Authors: _Pat Brereton _And Chao-Ping Hong
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Contributor,a=H/view-Contact-Page,id=35448/>
Review: 'Greening the Media'
Author: Kiu-wai Chu
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Contributor,a=C/view-Contact-Page,id=28904/>
http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-issue,id=2616/
--
Dr. Pietari Kääpä
Lecturer in Communications, Media and Culture
University of Stirling
FK9 4LA
Stirling
Scotland
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