{"title":"使不可见的变化可见:动物的例子和生物多样性丧失的交流","authors":"Marit Ruge Bjærke","doi":"10.3384/cu.2000.1525.191127","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Communicating biodiversity loss and other environmental threats is never only about relating natural science data. How different environmental discourses are presented, how they intertwine, and what concepts of nature are implied, are important parts of environmental communication. The release of the 2015 Norwegian Red List for Species by the Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre was commented on by governmental and non-governmental organizations, and was covered quite extensively in Norwegian national and local papers. In this article, I investigate the use of animals as examples in media texts on the Norwegian Red List, and the different conceptions of biodiversity loss that they activate. The examples studied in the article vary from the listing of species’ names to longer narratives connected with a single species. What they have in common, however, is that the authors use them to make the general issue of the texts more real and understandable to the reader or listener. The conceptions of biodiversity, produced through animal examples in the various media, ranged from happiness and childhood magic, to a climate-changed future, and to recreational hunting. The close reading of the examples shows that both the choice of species and, more specifically, which of the species’ many relationships to portray as part of the exemplary narrative, is crucial to the conceptions of biodiversity loss and of nature that are conveyed to the public. Through their way of both exceeding and reducing the general statement they are meant to illustrate, the examples bring some ideas about biodiversity loss to the foreground, but at the same time obscure others, thus providing insight into how biodiversity loss is constructed and communicated as an environmental problem. Bjærke, Marit Ruge: “Making Invisible Changes Visible: Animal Examples and the Communication of Biodiversity Loss”, Culture Unbound, Volume 11, issue 3–4, 2019: 394–414. Published by Linköping University Electronic Press: http://www. cultureunbound.ep.liu.se","PeriodicalId":52133,"journal":{"name":"Culture Unbound","volume":"11 1","pages":"394-414"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-11-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Making Invisible Changes Visible: Animal Examples and the Communication of Biodiversity Loss\",\"authors\":\"Marit Ruge Bjærke\",\"doi\":\"10.3384/cu.2000.1525.191127\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Communicating biodiversity loss and other environmental threats is never only about relating natural science data. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
传达生物多样性丧失和其他环境威胁绝不仅仅是与自然科学数据相关。不同的环境话语如何呈现,它们如何相互交织,以及隐含了什么样的自然概念,这些都是环境传播的重要组成部分。挪威生物多样性信息中心发布的2015年挪威物种红色名录得到了政府和非政府组织的评论,并在挪威国家和地方报纸上得到了广泛报道。在这篇文章中,我调查了在挪威红色名录的媒体文本中动物作为例子的使用,以及它们所激活的生物多样性丧失的不同概念。文章中研究的例子从物种名称的列表到与单个物种有关的更长的叙述都有变化。然而,它们的共同之处在于,作者使用它们使文本的总体问题对读者或听者来说更真实、更容易理解。生物多样性的概念是通过各种媒体上的动物例子产生的,从幸福和童年的魔法,到气候变化的未来,再到休闲狩猎。仔细阅读这些例子表明,物种的选择,更具体地说,物种之间的许多关系中,哪一个被描绘成典范叙事的一部分,对于向公众传达生物多样性丧失和自然的概念至关重要。通过他们的方式既超越又减少了他们想要说明的一般陈述,这些例子将一些关于生物多样性丧失的观点带到了前台,但同时模糊了其他观点,从而提供了对生物多样性丧失如何被构建和传播为环境问题的见解。bj . e . rke, Marit Ruge:“使无形的变化可见:动物的例子和生物多样性丧失的传播”,《文化散文集》,第11卷,第3-4期,2019:394-414。出版:Linköping大学电子出版社:http://www。cultureunbound.ep.liu.se
Making Invisible Changes Visible: Animal Examples and the Communication of Biodiversity Loss
Communicating biodiversity loss and other environmental threats is never only about relating natural science data. How different environmental discourses are presented, how they intertwine, and what concepts of nature are implied, are important parts of environmental communication. The release of the 2015 Norwegian Red List for Species by the Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre was commented on by governmental and non-governmental organizations, and was covered quite extensively in Norwegian national and local papers. In this article, I investigate the use of animals as examples in media texts on the Norwegian Red List, and the different conceptions of biodiversity loss that they activate. The examples studied in the article vary from the listing of species’ names to longer narratives connected with a single species. What they have in common, however, is that the authors use them to make the general issue of the texts more real and understandable to the reader or listener. The conceptions of biodiversity, produced through animal examples in the various media, ranged from happiness and childhood magic, to a climate-changed future, and to recreational hunting. The close reading of the examples shows that both the choice of species and, more specifically, which of the species’ many relationships to portray as part of the exemplary narrative, is crucial to the conceptions of biodiversity loss and of nature that are conveyed to the public. Through their way of both exceeding and reducing the general statement they are meant to illustrate, the examples bring some ideas about biodiversity loss to the foreground, but at the same time obscure others, thus providing insight into how biodiversity loss is constructed and communicated as an environmental problem. Bjærke, Marit Ruge: “Making Invisible Changes Visible: Animal Examples and the Communication of Biodiversity Loss”, Culture Unbound, Volume 11, issue 3–4, 2019: 394–414. Published by Linköping University Electronic Press: http://www. cultureunbound.ep.liu.se
期刊介绍:
Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research is a journal for border-crossing cultural research, globally open to articles from all areas in this large field, including cultural studies as well as other interdisciplinary and transnational currents for exploring cultural perspectives, issues and phenomena. It is peer-reviewed and easily accessible for downloading as open access. Culture Unbound is hosted by Linköping University Electronic Press (LiU E-Press, www.ep.liu.se). It is based on a co-operation between three Linköping University units that provide a unique profile to the journal, bridging regional and global research traditions: -The Advanced Cultural Studies Institute of Sweden (ACSIS), with interdisciplinary transnational exchange. -The Department of Culture Studies (Tema Q), with interdisciplinary research and PhD education.