Kapitel
Open Access
7. “This will all be yours – and under water”: Climate Change Depictions in Editorial Cartoons
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Esben Bjerggaard Nielsen
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgements IX
- 1. Introduction: Genre in the Climate Debate 1
- 2. Genre for Social Action: Transforming Worlds Through Genre Awareness and Action 17
- 3. Scientific Knowledge, Public Knowledge, and Public Policy: How Genres Form and Disrupt Knowledge for Acting about Anthropogenic Climate Change 34
- 4. How The US Congress Knows and Evades Knowing About Anthropogenic Climate Change: The Record Created in Committee Hearings, 2004–2016 51
- 5. Genre, Uptake, and the Recontextualization of Climate Change Science by ‘Denialist’ Cultural Communities 85
- 6. “THINK BIG and then do absolutely NÜSCHTE”. News Satire and the Climate Debate 108
- 7. “This will all be yours – and under water”: Climate Change Depictions in Editorial Cartoons 129
- 8. “How to Turn Accumulated Knowledge into Action”: Uptake, Public Petitions, and the Climate Change Debate 150
- 9. Rogue Rhetorical Actors: Scientists and the Social Action of Tweeting 179
- 10. Genre, Anthropogenic Climate Change, and the Need to Smell your Body Odor. A Personal Postscript 194
- About the Contributors 198
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgements IX
- 1. Introduction: Genre in the Climate Debate 1
- 2. Genre for Social Action: Transforming Worlds Through Genre Awareness and Action 17
- 3. Scientific Knowledge, Public Knowledge, and Public Policy: How Genres Form and Disrupt Knowledge for Acting about Anthropogenic Climate Change 34
- 4. How The US Congress Knows and Evades Knowing About Anthropogenic Climate Change: The Record Created in Committee Hearings, 2004–2016 51
- 5. Genre, Uptake, and the Recontextualization of Climate Change Science by ‘Denialist’ Cultural Communities 85
- 6. “THINK BIG and then do absolutely NÜSCHTE”. News Satire and the Climate Debate 108
- 7. “This will all be yours – and under water”: Climate Change Depictions in Editorial Cartoons 129
- 8. “How to Turn Accumulated Knowledge into Action”: Uptake, Public Petitions, and the Climate Change Debate 150
- 9. Rogue Rhetorical Actors: Scientists and the Social Action of Tweeting 179
- 10. Genre, Anthropogenic Climate Change, and the Need to Smell your Body Odor. A Personal Postscript 194
- About the Contributors 198