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  • Environmental Communication and the Public Sphere

    Environmental Communication and the Public Sphere by Pezzullo, Phaedra C.; Cox, Robert;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 114.00
      • The price is estimated because at the time of ordering we do not know what conversion rates will apply to HUF / product currency when the book arrives. In case HUF is weaker, the price increases slightly, in case HUF is stronger, the price goes lower slightly.

        54 463 Ft (51 870 Ft + 5% VAT)
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      • Discounted price 43 571 Ft (41 496 Ft + 5% VAT)

    54 463 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Edition number Seventh Edition, Revised
    • Publisher SAGE Publications, Inc
    • Date of Publication 14 November 2025

    • ISBN 9781071922392
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages432 pages
    • Size 254x177 mm
    • Language English
    • 700

    Categories

    Short description:

    The Seventh Edition of the award-winning Environmental Communication and the Public Sphere is the best-selling comprehensive introduction in the field of environmental communication. This groundbreaking book focuses on the role that human communication plays in influencing the ways we perceive, transform, and attempt to heal relations with everything we consider to be "the environment" - from microscopic chemicals in cosmetics to the climate we breathe. Authors Phaedra C. Pezzullo and Robert Cox examine how we define what constitutes an environmental problem and how we decide what actions to take concerning the natural world. The updated and revised Seventh Edition explores recent events and research that have emerged since the last edition, including: the latest on the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on journalism, climate commitments of Big Tech, global climate justice course cases, mutual aid networking, ultra-processed food policy, anti-plastics advocacy, expanding legal rights of nonhuman animals, and more. 


     

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    Long description:

    The best-selling Environmental Communication and the Public Sphere offers your students a comprehensive introduction to the field of environmental communication. The updated Seventh Edition explores recent events and research, including the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on journalism, climate commitments of Big Tech, ultra-processed food policy, anti-plastics advocacy, expanding legal rights of nonhuman animals, and more.

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    Table of Contents:

    About the Authors
    Acknowledgments to the Seventh Edition
    Introduction
    Part I • Communicating As, For, About, And with The Environment
    Chapter 1 • Defining Environmental Communication: On Trees, Wolves, and Plastics
    Communication as Symbolic Action: Communicating with and about Trees
    Communication Matters: Reintroducing Wolves
    A Crisis and Care Discipline
    Public Spheres as Democratic Spaces: From Ideals to Scapegoats
    Purpose: What Motivates Environmental Communication in the Public Sphere?
    Diverse Voices in The Public Sphere: Agents of Change
    Ways of Studying Environmental Communication
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Chapter 2 • Cultural and Rhetorical Environmental Discourses: From Apples to Zendaya
    Rhetorical Perspectives: On Apples
    Naming: From “There’s a whale!” to Advocating “Beans for Beef”
    Framing: On Plant-Rich Diets, Artificial Turf, and Farmer Backlash
    The Rhetorical Situation: Getting Our Feet Wet
    Apocalyptic Rhetoric and Melodrama: Silent Spring or Chicken Littles?
    Dominant v. Critical Discourses: Revisiting Water and Food
    Myth
    Eco-Celebrities: Cool or Cruel?
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Chapter 3 • Contested Meanings of the Environment: A Brief History
    Turtle Island
    Learning to Love Nature
    Wilderness Preservation versus Natural Resource Conservation
    Public Health and the Environmental Movement
    Environmental Justice: Linking Social Justice and Public Health
    Contemporary Movements
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Chapter 4 • Contested Discourses: Communicating Climate Change
    Early Awareness of Climate Change and the Technical Sphere
    Challenges to Communicating Care in the Climate Crisis
    Public Communication about Climate Controversies
    Early Climate Symbols: Tipping Points and Footprints
    Who is Hit First and Worst?: The Cruel Irony of Climate Change
    Climate Action Backlash: Uncertainty, Delay, and Disinformation
    Talking about the Climate Crisis
    Public Opinion Data: Backlash is a Minority—The Majority Care
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Part II • Environmental Campaigns And Movements
    Chapter 5 • Environmental Justice Movement: From Disobedience to Reinvention
    The Lifecycle of the Movement for Environmental Justice
    The Lifecycle of the Movement for Environmental Justice
    Reaffirming and Reinventing Movements for Environmental Justice
    Flipping the Script: Talking about Environmental Privilege
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Chapter 6 • Advocacy for Climate Justice: Moving from Cruel Irony to a Just Transition
    Climate Injustice: A Global Pattern
    Advocacy and the Dilemma of Social Change
    Inside or Outside, Take One: Articulating A Just Transition
    Inside or Outside, Take One: Disrupting Business as Usual
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Chapter 7 • Visual Rhetoric & Market-based Advocacy: From Boycotts to Divestment
    Visual Rhetoric and Nature Advocacy
    Seeing the American West
    Moving Images of Disasters
    Witnessing Biodiversity Loss through Projection Mapping and Documentaries
    Alert, Amplify, and Engage
    Three Challenges for (Digital) Engagement
    Market-based Advocacy
    Divest and Reinvest Climate Campaigns
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Chapter 8 • Environmental Advocacy Campaigns: From Resisting Toxic Pollution to Protecting Zuni Salt Lake
    A Warmup to Advocacy Campaigns: Critical Rhetoric
    Environmental Advocacy Campaigns
    An Advocacy Campaign for a Toxic Study and Redress in Mississippi
    An Advocacy Campaign to Protect Zuni Salt Lake from Strip-Mining
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Part III • Environmental Communication Here, There, Everywhere
    Chapter 9 • Environmental Journalism: From Narratives to Fact-Checking
    Environmental Journalism in the Public Sphere
    A Perfect Storm: The Decline of Traditional Journalism in the West
    Breaking News and Environmental Journalism
    Political Economy of News Media
    Media Effects and Influences
    Digital Storytelling and Environmental News
    The Impact of AI on Veracity: An Emerging Trend
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Chapter 10 • Green Advertising and Media: From Greenwashing to Sustainable Storylines
    The Environment and Popular Culture
    Sustainability Discourses: Public Goods versus Free Markets
    Corporate Sustainability Communication
    Greenwashing: Lies and Lawsuits
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Chapter 11 • Risk Communication: From the Trope of Uncertainty to Health Activism
    Dangerous Environments: Assessment in a Risk Society
    Communicating Risks in the Public Sphere
    The Precautionary Principle: “Better Safe than Sorry”
    Toxic Politics: From Privatizing to Publicizing Chemical Disasters
    Fracked: The Expansion of Hydraulic Fracturing and The Voices of Dissent
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Part IV • Disputed Environmental Laws and Disorder
    Chapter 12 • Possibilities of Public Participation: Food Fights & Toxic Politics, Continued
    Rights of Public Participation: An Overview
    Right to Know: Transparency and Access to Information
    Right to Comment: Involvement
    Advisory Committees on Toxic Pollution—and the Ideal of Collaboration
    SLAPP: Strategic Litigation against Public Participation
    Growth of Public Participation Globally
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Chapter 13 • Debating Voice and Standing: From Nature’s Rights to Intergenerational Justice
    Right of Expression and Right of Assembly
    Right of Standing: Who Legally Can Speak?
    Landmark Cases on Environmental Standing
    Reversing, Slowing, Or Reducing Global Warming as Injury
    Who Should Have a Right of Standing?
    Summary
    Suggested Resources
    Key Terms
    Discussion Questions
    Epilogue: Imagining Stories for Our Future
    Glossary
    References
    Index

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