This article examines the visualization of climate change through two empirical studies. First, a quantitative overview of the visuals emerging in newspapers in 15 different countries before, during and after the Copenhagen climate summit in 2009. The findings demonstrate a variety of visual topics as well as genres, and a global diversity having to do with press conventions as well as access to resources. Then follows an in-depth study of a small number of cartoons published in the same period addressing global conflict, most of them linked to framing the Global North as responsible for the development of climate change. Leaning on Barthes and supplemented by other scholars who have studied media visualization, the article discusses the pa...
This study explores current trends in representing and communicating climate change by media industr...
One of the most serious global issues presently is climate change. News media has an important role ...
Climate change is a “future-sensitive issue” (Kumpu, 2013, p. 53). Research has shown that expectati...
This is the final version. Available from Springer via the DOI in this record. The metadata supporti...
This research analyzes the framing of climate change in both developed and developing countries. It ...
Many actors—including scientists, journalists, artists, and campaigning organizations—create visuali...
The present investigation identifies the key images that British newspapers use to represent climate...
Previous research has shown that Western visual journalism has represented climate change through ce...
In October 2020 Peter Wolodarski, the editor-in-chief of the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter (DN), ...
We live in a world increasingly defined by global crises. These are crises whose origins and outcom...
In this chapter, we explore the dynamic role of mass media in covering anthropogenic climate change....
Over the past three decades, there has been a significant increase in political and media attention ...
Climate is one of the crucial parameters that determines the social and economic aspects of a place....
Images of melting glaciers have come to dominate the pictorial language of climate change. This pape...
Television images can provide powerful symbols of ecological disaster. As Ulrich Beck notes (2009: 8...
This study explores current trends in representing and communicating climate change by media industr...
One of the most serious global issues presently is climate change. News media has an important role ...
Climate change is a “future-sensitive issue” (Kumpu, 2013, p. 53). Research has shown that expectati...
This is the final version. Available from Springer via the DOI in this record. The metadata supporti...
This research analyzes the framing of climate change in both developed and developing countries. It ...
Many actors—including scientists, journalists, artists, and campaigning organizations—create visuali...
The present investigation identifies the key images that British newspapers use to represent climate...
Previous research has shown that Western visual journalism has represented climate change through ce...
In October 2020 Peter Wolodarski, the editor-in-chief of the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter (DN), ...
We live in a world increasingly defined by global crises. These are crises whose origins and outcom...
In this chapter, we explore the dynamic role of mass media in covering anthropogenic climate change....
Over the past three decades, there has been a significant increase in political and media attention ...
Climate is one of the crucial parameters that determines the social and economic aspects of a place....
Images of melting glaciers have come to dominate the pictorial language of climate change. This pape...
Television images can provide powerful symbols of ecological disaster. As Ulrich Beck notes (2009: 8...
This study explores current trends in representing and communicating climate change by media industr...
One of the most serious global issues presently is climate change. News media has an important role ...
Climate change is a “future-sensitive issue” (Kumpu, 2013, p. 53). Research has shown that expectati...