生态语言学与可持续发展目标的关系

Meng Huat Chau, Chenghao Zhu, G. Jacobs, Nimrod Delante, Alfian Asmi, Serena Ng, Sharon Santhia John, Qi Guo, Krishnavanie Shunmugam
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引用次数: 4

摘要

本文考虑了语言研究(包括生态语言学)对现实世界重要问题的潜在影响,以及语言学家和其他人如何参与解决这些问题,以实现可持续的未来。本文分为两部分。第一部分提供了一个说明性研究,其中计算机工具被用来调查媒体报道。该研究调查了马来西亚、新加坡、英国和美国的四家主要报纸对人类基本需求(食物、清洁水和卫生设施)问题的相对报道,这些问题是联合国可持续发展目标的重点之一,以及对COVID-19大流行疫情的报道。数据收集于2019年11月1日至2020年3月31日期间,当时COVID-19大流行处于全球关注的早期阶段。在此期间,这些报纸对疫情的报道远远超过其他问题,尽管在收集数据时,人类的基本需求远远超过了COVID-19大流行造成的死亡和其他形式的痛苦,更不用说在COVID-19大流行爆发前的许多年里对人类生命造成的损失。我们从媒体和相关行业的专业人士那里探讨了造成这种严重差异的原因。我们认为,媒体报道的扭曲分布反映了责任和价值观的危机。文章的第二部分旨在强调我们这些从事语言研究的人如何能够为更广泛的讨论做出贡献,其中包括媒体在塑造公众对可持续发展核心问题的看法和行动方面的作用和责任,以及我们如何能够更多地参与社会活动。我们的结论是,生态语言学家对世界的可持续性有很大的贡献,这最终需要尊重整个生态社区。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ecolinguistics for and beyond the Sustainable Development Goals
Abstract This article considers potential impacts the study of language, including ecolinguistics, can have on important real-world issues, and how linguists and others can involve themselves in addressing these issues for a sustainable future. The article is divided into two parts. The first part provides an illustrative study in which computer tools were utilized to investigate media reporting. The study examined the relative coverage of issues of basic human needs (food, clean water, and sanitation), which are part of the focus of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and of the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak, in four major newspapers from Malaysia, Singapore, the UK and the US. Data were collected between November 1, 2019 to March 31, 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic was in its early days in terms of worldwide attention. During that time period, the pandemic received far more coverage in those newspapers than did the other issues, even though basic human needs greatly outweighed the COVID-19 pandemic as to deaths and other forms of suffering at the time of data collection, not to mention the toll on human life in the many years before the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak. Reasons for this severe discrepancy were explored with insights from professionals working in the media and related sectors. The skewed distribution of media coverage, we argue, reflects a crisis of responsibility and values. The second part of the article serves to highlight how those of us in language studies can make a contribution to the wider discussion about, among other important concerns, the role and responsibility of media in shaping the public’s views and actions on issues that are at the heart of sustainable development, and how we can be more socially engaged. We conclude by arguing that ecolinguists have much to contribute to the sustainability of the world, which ultimately requires a respect for the entire ecological community.
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