In this chapter, we argue that the contemporary eco-crisis challenges the foundations of media studies, which must find ways to become a greener discipline. As critical scholars, we cannot stand outside the realities of planetary decline, in particular when some of the very technologies we admire and study are significant contributors to the crisis..
CO2 emissions have been rising and the Earth’s atmosphere is warming to perilous temperatures, makin...
While critical media literacy has historically confronted a range of social justice issues— includi...
“Countering Neoliberalism through an EcoJustice Approach to Critical Media Literacy” examines the cr...
richard.maxwell[AT]qc.cuny.edu This essay argues that media industry studies should be open to eco-m...
Environmental concerns are increasingly relevant to everyone, and an informed public is a critical i...
Identifies the media's complicity in environmental pollution, illustrating how information technolog...
Ecomedia: Key Issues is a comprehensive textbook introducing the burgeoning field of ecomedia studie...
This paper explores how communication and media studies have engaged with the concept of the Anthrop...
The environmental crisis and climate change belong to a group of topics that appear not to be receiv...
This chapter rethinks the relationship of the media to the environment through the notion of green c...
Does the trend in which electronic media are gradually becoming extension of human body have to move...
Climate change is a concern for many nations, industries and citizens. However, for some it will als...
In times of unprecedented environmental crisis, which disrupt traditional ways of conducting researc...
Research on media sustainability has a long tradition of criticising climate change and environmenta...
For years, environmental problems in the US have been represented in mainstream media as issues of u...
CO2 emissions have been rising and the Earth’s atmosphere is warming to perilous temperatures, makin...
While critical media literacy has historically confronted a range of social justice issues— includi...
“Countering Neoliberalism through an EcoJustice Approach to Critical Media Literacy” examines the cr...
richard.maxwell[AT]qc.cuny.edu This essay argues that media industry studies should be open to eco-m...
Environmental concerns are increasingly relevant to everyone, and an informed public is a critical i...
Identifies the media's complicity in environmental pollution, illustrating how information technolog...
Ecomedia: Key Issues is a comprehensive textbook introducing the burgeoning field of ecomedia studie...
This paper explores how communication and media studies have engaged with the concept of the Anthrop...
The environmental crisis and climate change belong to a group of topics that appear not to be receiv...
This chapter rethinks the relationship of the media to the environment through the notion of green c...
Does the trend in which electronic media are gradually becoming extension of human body have to move...
Climate change is a concern for many nations, industries and citizens. However, for some it will als...
In times of unprecedented environmental crisis, which disrupt traditional ways of conducting researc...
Research on media sustainability has a long tradition of criticising climate change and environmenta...
For years, environmental problems in the US have been represented in mainstream media as issues of u...
CO2 emissions have been rising and the Earth’s atmosphere is warming to perilous temperatures, makin...
While critical media literacy has historically confronted a range of social justice issues— includi...
“Countering Neoliberalism through an EcoJustice Approach to Critical Media Literacy” examines the cr...