6533b86efe1ef96bd12cc9fd

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Popularity-driven science journalism and climate change: A critical discourse analysis of the unsaid

Katarzyna Molek-kozakowska

subject

Cultural Studiesframemedia_common.quotation_subject050801 communication & media studiesCritical discourse analysis0508 media and communicationsPolitical scienceNews valuesQuality (business)NarrativeSocial sciencemobilizationScience journalismmedia_common060201 languages & linguisticsNew Scientistbusiness.industryCommunication05 social sciences06 humanities and the artscritical discourse analysisPublic relationsPopularityclimate change0602 languages and literatureJournalismbusinesspopular science journalismUnderspecification

description

Abstract This study traces popularity-driven coverage of climate change in New Scientist with the special aim of identifying which aspects of the issue have been backgrounded. Unlike institutional communication or quality press coverage of climate change, commercial science journalism has received less attention with respect to how it frames the crisis. Assuming that the construction of newsworthiness in popular science journalism requires eliminating, or at least obscuring, some alienating information, the study identifies prevalent frames, news values and discursive strategies in the outlet’s most-read online articles on climate change (2013–2015). With the official statement of the World Meteorological Organization (2014) as a reference, it considers which dimensions of the coverage have been backgrounded, and illustrates how language is recruited to de-emphasize some representations through implicitness, underspecification, or syntactic and compositional devices. It finds that the coverage relies on threat frames, privileges novelty and the timeliness and impact of climate science, avoids responsibility and adaptation frames, and endorses the so-called progress narrative. It discusses how this may forestall social and personal mobilization by placing trust in science institutions and technologies to confront the crisis.

10.1016/j.dcm.2017.09.013https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211695817301058?via=ihub