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Journal of Environmental Media 1.1 is now available
Monday, January 06, 2020

Journal of Environmental Media 1.1 is now available

Intellect is delighted to announce that Journal of Environmental Media 1.1 is now available! 

 

You can access content from Igenta for free here >> https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/intellect/jem/2020/00000001/00000001

 

For more information about the journal, including how to subscribe and calls for papers, click here >> https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-of-environmental-media

 

Aims & Scope

 

The Journal of Environmental Media offers a scholarly platform to bridge work in environmental studies, identity and social justice, and science communication through the prism of screen media, focusing on the role of new and emerging digital media in our understanding and perception of the environment and related social issues.

 

Issue 1.1

 

Editorial

 

What is environmental media studies? 

MERYL SHRIVER-RICE AND HUNTER VAUGHAN 

 

Articles

 

From digital solutionism to materialist accountability: The urgency of new interventions

ADI KUNTSMAN

 

Digital cultures and climate change: ‘Here and now’

MAXWELL BOYKOFF

 

Media life in the Anthropocene

IGNACIO BERGILLOS

 

Green living and the social media connection: The relationship between different media use types and green lifestyle politics among young adults 

LAURA LEISSNER

 

Between crisis and care: Projection mapping as creative climate advocacy 

PHAEDRA C. PEZZULLO

 

Visualizing climate change in the Arctic and beyond: Participatory media and the United Nations Conference of the Parties (COP), and interactive Indigenous Arctic media

SCOTT MACKENZIE AND ANNA WESTERSTAHL STENPORT

 

Imaging global communications: An ecocritique

SEAN CUBITT 

 

Reviews

 

‘On Communion Los Angeles and the infrastructural travelogues of Peter Bo Rappmund’ Communion Los Angeles, Peter Bo Rappmund and Adam R. Levine (2018), 68min., digital video, USA 

BEN MENDELSOHN

 

‘Future histories in service of the present: On Eva Horn’s The Future as Catastrophe’ The Future as Catastrophe: Imagining Disaster in the Modern Age, Eva Horn (2018) (trans. Valentine A. Pakis) 

THOMAS PATRICK PRINGLE