This paper addresses the politicisation of the idea of wilderness in the Australian news media and questions how journalistic labelling in news copy intensified this process. It is based on research into the coverage of the Franklin Dam blockade in the summer of 1982-83, the first wilderness campaign to attain global stature. Specifically, it analyses the coverage of the 10-week protest in the Melbourne Age and the Hobart Mercury, and draws on the work of Allan Bell, Teun van Dijk and Roger Fowler to discuss how journalists and their readers formed an 'alliance of shared meaning'
In the wake of the global environmental and economic crises, the development of renewable energy is ...
Media discourse is dialogic in nature (cf. Bakhtin, 1981; Zelizer, 1989), frequently including infor...
Since the 1970s, the Reef has been a site where Australian environmental policy hasflourished, mirro...
This paper addresses the politicisation of the idea of wilderness in the Australian news media and q...
Environmental politics and values gain legitimacy through their constant presence in the media. This...
The deployment of celebrities is a well-established practice in environmental politics, but does the...
This paper asks how the incorporation of public relations and marketing strategies into political de...
The Australian print media's reporting of the environment has never been more intense or important i...
This thesis examines environmental journalists, and the nature of their response to a set of perceiv...
This paper considers the role journalistic feedback and reflexivity has played in news coverage of t...
Over the past two decades, the media representation of environmental direct action (EDA) frames its ...
This study investigates how climate change was constructed in the Australian mainstream press over a...
Wilderness conservation has a checkered history in Australian politics. Initially, wilderness was pr...
This paper traces the development of news discourse across the 20th century ihrough a case study oft...
This paper traces the development of news discourse across the 20th century ihrough a case study oft...
In the wake of the global environmental and economic crises, the development of renewable energy is ...
Media discourse is dialogic in nature (cf. Bakhtin, 1981; Zelizer, 1989), frequently including infor...
Since the 1970s, the Reef has been a site where Australian environmental policy hasflourished, mirro...
This paper addresses the politicisation of the idea of wilderness in the Australian news media and q...
Environmental politics and values gain legitimacy through their constant presence in the media. This...
The deployment of celebrities is a well-established practice in environmental politics, but does the...
This paper asks how the incorporation of public relations and marketing strategies into political de...
The Australian print media's reporting of the environment has never been more intense or important i...
This thesis examines environmental journalists, and the nature of their response to a set of perceiv...
This paper considers the role journalistic feedback and reflexivity has played in news coverage of t...
Over the past two decades, the media representation of environmental direct action (EDA) frames its ...
This study investigates how climate change was constructed in the Australian mainstream press over a...
Wilderness conservation has a checkered history in Australian politics. Initially, wilderness was pr...
This paper traces the development of news discourse across the 20th century ihrough a case study oft...
This paper traces the development of news discourse across the 20th century ihrough a case study oft...
In the wake of the global environmental and economic crises, the development of renewable energy is ...
Media discourse is dialogic in nature (cf. Bakhtin, 1981; Zelizer, 1989), frequently including infor...
Since the 1970s, the Reef has been a site where Australian environmental policy hasflourished, mirro...