Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Picturing two modernities: Ecological modernisation and the media imagery of climate change Cover

Picturing two modernities: Ecological modernisation and the media imagery of climate change

By: Jarkko Kangas  
Open Access
|Feb 2019

References

  1. Anderson, A. (1997). Media, culture and the environment. London: UCL Press.
  2. Ball, V. K. (1965). The aesthetics of colour: A review of fifty years of experimentation. The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 23(4): 441–452.
  3. Barthes, R. (1987). The photographic message. In S. Heath (ed.), Image, music, text: Essays (pp. 15–31). London: Fontana Press.
  4. Beckham Hooff, S., Botetzagias, I. & Kizos, A. (2017). Seeing the wind (farm): Applying q-methodology to understand the public’s reception of the visuals around a wind farm development. Environmental Communication, 11(5): 700–722.
  5. Boykoff, M. T. (2011). Who speaks for the climate: Making sense of media reporting on climate change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  6. Caple, H. (2013). Photojournalism: A social semiotic approach. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  7. Carvalho, A. (2005). Representing the politics of the greenhouse effect: Discursive strategies in the British media. Critical Discourse Studies, 2(1): 1–29.
  8. Carvalho, A. (2007). Ideological cultures and media discourses of scientific knowledge: Re-reading news of climate change. Public Understanding of Science, 16(2): 223–243.
  9. Christoff, P. (1996). Ecological modernisation, ecological modernities. Environmental Politics, 5(3): 476–500.
  10. Cordney, T. (2013). Going global on our digital journey. The Guardian, 24 May 2013 [online]. Retrieved from < https://www.theguardian.com/help/insideguardian/2013/may/24/theguardian-global-domain>. [accessed 2018, August 8].
  11. Davidsen, C. & Graham, D. (2014). Newspaper reporting on climate change, green energy and carbon reduction strategies across Canada 1999–2009. American Review of Canadian Studies, 44(2): 151–168.
  12. DiFrancesco, D. A. & Young, N. (2010). Seeing climate change: The visual construction of global warming in Canadian national print media. Cultural Geographies, 18(4): 517–536.
  13. Djerf-Pierre, M., Cokley, J. & Kuchel, L. J. (2016). Framing renewable energy: A comparative study of newspapers in Australia and Sweden. Environmental Communication, 10(5): 634–655.
  14. Doyle, J. (2007). Picturing the clima(c)tic: Greenpeace and the representational politics of climate change communication. Science as Culture, 16(2): 129–150.
  15. Dryzek, J. S. (2005). The politics of the Earth: Environmental discourses (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  16. Foucault, M. (1989). The archaeology of knowledge. London: Routledge.
  17. Frosh, P. (2002). Rhetorics of the overlooked: On the communicative modes of stock advertising images. Journal of Consumer Culture, 2(2): 171–196.
  18. Gage, J. (1993). Colour and culture: Practice and meaning from antiquity to abstraction. London: Thames & Hudson.
  19. Grittman, E. (2014). Between beauty, risk and the sublime: The visualisation of climate change in media coverage during COP 15 in Copenhagen 2009. In B. Schneider & T. Nocke (eds.), Image politics of climate change (pp. 127–150). Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag.
  20. Hahn, O., Eide, E. & Zarqa, S. A. (2012). The evidence of things unseen: Visualising global warming. In E. Eide & R. Kunelius (eds.), Media meets climate: The global challenge for journalism (pp. 221–246). Göteborg: Nordicom.
  21. Hajer, M. A. (1995). The politics of environmental discourse: Ecological modernisation and the policy process. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  22. Hajer, M. A. (1996). Ecological modernisation as cultural politics. In S. Lash, B. Szerszynski & B. Wynne (eds.), Risk, environment & modernity: Towards a new ecology (pp. 246–268). London: Sage.
  23. Hannigan, J. (2006). Environmental sociology (2nd ed.). London: Routledge.
  24. Hansen, A. & Machin, D. (2008). Visually branding the environment: Climate change as a marketing opportunity. Discourse Studies, 10(6): 777–794.
  25. Howard-Williams, R. (2009). Ideological construction of climate change in Australian and New Zealand newspapers. In T. Boyce & J. Lewis (eds.), Climate change and the media (pp. 28–40). New York: Lang.
  26. Kangas, J. (2016). Näkymätön ilmasto, näkyviä kuvia: Ilmastoriskin visualisointi ja kuvallinen kehystäminen Helsingin Sanomissa [Invisible climate, visible images: The visualisation and pictorial framing of the climate change risk in Helsingin Sanomat]. Media & viestintä, 39(4): 209–227.
  27. Kress, G. (2010). Multimodality: A social semiotic approach to contemporary communication. London: Routledge.
  28. Kress, G. & van Leeuwen, T. (1996). Reading images: The grammar of visual design. London: Routledge.
  29. Kress, G. & van Leeuwen, T. (2002). Colour as a semiotic mode: Notes for a grammar of colour. Visual Communication, 1(3): 343–368.
  30. Krippendorff, K. (2013). Content analysis: An introduction to its methodology. Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore: Sage Publications.
  31. Laclau, E. & Mouffe, C. (1985). Hegemony & socialist strategy. London: Verso.
  32. León, B. & Erviti, M. C. (2015). Science in pictures: Visual representation of climate change in Spain’s television news. Public Understanding of Science, 24(2): 183–199.
  33. Lester, L. & Cottle, S. (2009). Visualising climate change: Television news and ecological citizenship. International Journal of Communication, 3, 920–936.
  34. Lewis, J. & Boyce, T. (2009). Climate change and the media: The scale of the challenge. In T. Boyce & J. Lewis (eds.), Climate change and the media (pp. 4–16). New York: Lang.
  35. Macnaghten, P. & Urry, J. (1998). Contested natures. London: Sage.
  36. Messaris, P. & Abraham, L. (2001). The role of images in framing news stories. In S. D. Reese, O. H. Gandy Jr. & A. E. Grant (eds.), Framing public life: Perspectives on media and our understanding of the social world (pp. 215–226). Mahwah: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
  37. O’Neill, S. J. (2013). Image matters: Climate change imagery in US, UK and Australian newspapers. Geoforum, 49: 10–19.
  38. Painter, J. (2013). United Kingdom. In J. Painter (ed.), Climate change in the media: Reporting risk and uncertainty (pp. 116–125). London: Tauris.
  39. Painter, J., Kristiansen, S. & Schäfer, M. S. (2018). How “digital-born” media cover climate change in comparison to legacy media: A case study of the cop 21 summit in paris. Global Environmental Change, 48: 1–10.
  40. Rebich-Hespanha, S., Rice, R. E., Montello, D. R., Retzloff, S., Tien, S. & Hespanha, J. P. (2015). Image themes and frames in US print news stories about climate change. Environmental Communication, 9(4): 491–519.
  41. Remillard, C. (2011). Picturing environmental risk: The Canadian oil sands and the national geography. The International Communication Gazette, 73(1–2): 127–143.
  42. Rose, G. (2007). Visual methodologies: An introduction to researching with visual materials. London: Sage.
  43. Schneider, B. (2012). Climate model simulation visualisation from a visual studies perspective. WIREs Climate Change, 3(2).
  44. Schneider, B. & Nocke, T. (2014). Image politics of climate change: Introduction. In B. Schneider & T. Nocke (eds.), Image politics of climate change (pp. 9–24). Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag.
  45. Smith, N. W. & Joffe, H. (2009). Climate change in the British press: The role of the visual. Journal of Risk Research, 12(5): 647–663.
  46. Spaargaren, G. (2000). Ecological modernisation theory and the changing discourse on environment and sociology. In G. Spaargaren, A. P. J. Mol & F. H. Buttel (eds.), Environment and global modernity (pp. 41–71). London: Sage.
  47. Steffen, W., Rockström, J., Richardon, K., Lenton, T. M., Folke, C., Liverman, D., Summerhayes, C. P., Barnosky, A. D., Cornell, S. E., Cricifix, M., Donges, J. F., Fetzer, I., Lade, S. J., Scheffer, M., Winkel-mann, R. & Schellnhuber, H. J. (2018). Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene. PNAS, 115(33): 8252–8259.
  48. van Leeuwen, T. (2011). The language of colour: An introduction. Abingdon: Routledge.
  49. Weale, A. (1992). The new politics of pollution. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
  50. Whitfield, T. W. & Whiltshire, T. J. (1990). Colour psychology: A critical review. Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 116(4): 385–411.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/nor-2019-0003 | Journal eISSN: 2001-5119 | Journal ISSN: 1403-1108
Language: English
Page range: 61 - 74
Published on: Feb 19, 2019
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2019 Jarkko Kangas, published by University of Gothenburg Nordicom
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.