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Publication

Fighting carbon dioxide or fighting humans?

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Subtitle:The ideological fault lines underlying two climate change frames
Our collective future largely depends on the ways in which we frame climate change. It is argued, however, that the dominant frames are only superficially environmental and keep reproducing the (anthropocentric) hegemonic ideology. Real change, contrariwise, requires ideological transformation (biocentrism). As one frame can promote various ideologies, familiar frames like ‘Cycles of Nature’ or ‘Environmental Justice’ can provide convenient contexts for hegemonic struggles. However, little is known yet about the nature of the hegemonic and counter-hegemonic ‘subframes’. Therefore, we have conducted a qualitative framing analysis on a corpus of Belgian mainstream and alternative news articles. The results demonstrate the strong similarities among the two exemplary frames and striking contrasts within the frames. The anthropocentric
‘subframes’ foreground an external fight with a largely external enemy (carbon
dioxide). The biocentric ‘subframes’ highlight internal problems within human society. However, being quantitatively and qualitatively underdeveloped, the latter still lack the potency to truly inspire. Hence, they require further (collaborative) scrutiny and development.
Journal: International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics
ISSN: 1740-8296
Issue: 2
Volume: 14
Pages: 123-152
Publication year:2018
Keywords:Alternative media, Climate change framing, Environmental ideology, Environmental justice, Hegemonic struggle, Journalism
Authors:Regional
Accessibility:Open