The assumed ongoing disconnection between humans and nature in Western societies represents a profoundly challenging conservation issue. Here, we demonstrate one manifestation of this nature disconnection, via an examination of the representation of natural settings in a 70-year time series of Disney animated films. We found that natural settings are increasingly less present as a representation of outdoor environments in these films. Moreover, these drawn natural settings tend to be more and more human controlled and are less and less complex in terms of the biodiversity they depict. These results demonstrate the increasing nature disconnection of the filmmaking teams, which we consider as a proxy of the Western relation to nature. Additio...
Child-nature interaction has undergone drastic changes in modern history, from a free outdoor childh...
For most of human existence, children spent a great deal of their childhood’s outdoors, connecting ...
Nature\u27s not what it used to be. Consider the following. In 2001 alone, scientists and so-called ...
Human connection with nature is widely believed to be in decline, even though empirical evidence on ...
Human connection with nature is widely believed to be in decline, even though empirical evidence on ...
Picture books often play an important role in childhood socialization. Given the seriousness of envi...
Alongside Walt Disney’s animated movies, television programming, and theme parks, scholars have exam...
Studying landscape in cinema isn't quite new; it'd be hard to imagine Woody Allen without New York, ...
The influence of popular cartoons on environmental cognition is explored in this essay through readi...
With the rise of technology and industrial growth, people have increasingly lost personal contact wi...
Cinema offers a substantial opportunity to share messages with a wide audience. Given its global ran...
Our relationship with nature is complex and exploring this extends beyond academia. Animated films w...
Environmentalism and ecology are areas of rapid growth in academia and society at large. Screening N...
An unsettling trend is gaining momentum - many Americans may be losing their interest in the `natura...
We are at a moment in time where environmental crises continue to worsen and impact every aspect of ...
Child-nature interaction has undergone drastic changes in modern history, from a free outdoor childh...
For most of human existence, children spent a great deal of their childhood’s outdoors, connecting ...
Nature\u27s not what it used to be. Consider the following. In 2001 alone, scientists and so-called ...
Human connection with nature is widely believed to be in decline, even though empirical evidence on ...
Human connection with nature is widely believed to be in decline, even though empirical evidence on ...
Picture books often play an important role in childhood socialization. Given the seriousness of envi...
Alongside Walt Disney’s animated movies, television programming, and theme parks, scholars have exam...
Studying landscape in cinema isn't quite new; it'd be hard to imagine Woody Allen without New York, ...
The influence of popular cartoons on environmental cognition is explored in this essay through readi...
With the rise of technology and industrial growth, people have increasingly lost personal contact wi...
Cinema offers a substantial opportunity to share messages with a wide audience. Given its global ran...
Our relationship with nature is complex and exploring this extends beyond academia. Animated films w...
Environmentalism and ecology are areas of rapid growth in academia and society at large. Screening N...
An unsettling trend is gaining momentum - many Americans may be losing their interest in the `natura...
We are at a moment in time where environmental crises continue to worsen and impact every aspect of ...
Child-nature interaction has undergone drastic changes in modern history, from a free outdoor childh...
For most of human existence, children spent a great deal of their childhood’s outdoors, connecting ...
Nature\u27s not what it used to be. Consider the following. In 2001 alone, scientists and so-called ...