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[Commlist] Networking Knowledge 14(2) published - Special Issue: "Climate, Creatures and COVID-19: Environment and Animals in Twenty-First Century Media Discourse"
Mon Nov 01 13:47:01 GMT 2021
The Media, Communication and Cultural Studies Association (MeCCSA)
postgraduate network journal/Networking Knowledge///is delighted to
announce the publication of a special issue on the topic 'Climate,
Creatures and COVID-19: Environment and Animals in Twenty-First Century
Media Discourse'. This issue coincides with the start of COP26 in
Glasgow. The full issue and individual contributions can be viewed here:
https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/issue/view/70
This special issue of /Networking Knowledge /features much-needed
contributions to discussions about environment and ecology, particularly
in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the increasing urgency of the
climate crisis, changed ways of working, communicating, and thinking and
being in the world. These interventions are provided by postgraduate and
early-career researchers from a range of disciplines and cover a range
of subjects, all relevant to reflecting on the pre-COVID-19 world and
what we might still perceive as a ‘normal’ to be returned to or
reconfigured, the events of the pandemic and lockdown, and/or
constructions of the future, and the kind of recovery that is desirable
and achievable.
Maki Eguchi
<https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/647>
analyses a Japanese TV drama and its portrayal of pre-pandemic dairy
farming, while Catherine Price
<https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/641>
considers genetically modified animals and the rhetorical construction
of monstrosity. Lynda M. Korimboccus
<https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/651> asks
us to consider animals in children’s television, and the hypocrisy and
cognitive dissonance of ham sandwiches in /Peppa Pig/lunchboxes. Xin
Zhao <https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/629>
questions how the notion of ‘public’ is constructed in the reporting of
environmental justice policy in China, and Callum Bateson
<https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/644>
describes how the stories of Máiréad Ní Mhionacháin can help us to think
about the importance of environmental belonging and the impact of
colonialism in the Anthropocene.
Tayler Zavitz and Corie Kielbiski
<https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/643>
juxtapose Bong Joon Ho’s/Okja /(2017) and Karen Joy Fowler’s/We Are All
Completely Beside Ourselves/(2013) to analyse the power of entertainment
media in creating attitudes about animal rights and welfare activism.
Nivedita Tuli and Azam Danish
<https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/646> show
the role of Instagram in environmental justice, and how the platform can
distort and appropriate environmental and animal rights and welfare
campaigns into personal celebrity, marketing and other political
agendas. Jack Buchanan
<https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/645>
offers an analysis of ecological practice and worldhood in the work of
Welsh filmmaker Scott Barley, while Nikki E. Bennett and Elizabeth
Johnson
<https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/642>
talk/Tiger King/, and the impact the series has (or hasn’t) had on
public engagement with, and attitudes to, the ownership of big cats for
human entertainment. The special issue also contains a review
<https://www.ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/article/view/668> of
the book /Filling the Ark: Animal welfare in disasters/.
Theoretical work from critical animal studies, posthumanism, the
environmental humanities and media studies is brought to bear on
subjects that are relevant to how we have navigated (or failed to
navigate) interspecies relationships and the entanglement of humans and
ecology in the past, and how the pandemic period might offer us an
opportunity to reconsider and change direction.
We hope you enjoy this special issue of the journal, and would be very
grateful if you could share this in your networks. Any enquiries can be
directed to Editor-in-Chief Rebecca Jones (atrebecca.jones /at/ strath.ac.uk)
<mailto:(rebecca.jones /at/ strath.ac.uk)>
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