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Climate change in the UK press: Examining discourse fluctuation over time

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Climate change in the UK press: Examining discourse fluctuation over time. / Gillings, Mathew; Dayrell, Carmen.
In: Applied Linguistics, Vol. 45, No. 1, 07.03.2024, p. 111-133.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Gillings M, Dayrell C. Climate change in the UK press: Examining discourse fluctuation over time. Applied Linguistics. 2024 Mar 7;45(1):111-133. Epub 2023 Mar 22. doi: 10.1093/applin/amad007

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Gillings, Mathew ; Dayrell, Carmen. / Climate change in the UK press : Examining discourse fluctuation over time. In: Applied Linguistics. 2024 ; Vol. 45, No. 1. pp. 111-133.

Bibtex

@article{8a92c6d4940b4d33924aa877653e80f8,
title = "Climate change in the UK press: Examining discourse fluctuation over time",
abstract = "This article examines the discourses around climate change in the UK press from 2003 to 2019. Our main goal is to investigate how the media discourse developed during a period of significant world events, whilst also exploring the change in the UK public{\textquoteright}s perception of the problem. We combine the novel technique of Usage Fluctuation Analysis (UFA, McEnery et al. 2019) with corpus-assisted discourse analysis to track the fluctuation in the usage of the phrases climate change and global warming over this 17-year period. Thus, in addition to offering a methodological contribution by applying UFA to a relatively small specialized diachronic corpus, this article offers new insights on how the discourse evolved. Results indicate that the tabloids and broadsheets offer a surprisingly similar image of climate change discourse, both showing two major discoursal shifts. From an overall prevalence of articles advocating for the climate change cause, the discourse incorporated voices of climate sceptics from 2008 onwards, moving on to increased coverage and awareness of the problem in recent years when the public started to engage in it more heavily.",
keywords = "Linguistics and Language, Language and Linguistics, Communication",
author = "Mathew Gillings and Carmen Dayrell",
year = "2024",
month = mar,
day = "7",
doi = "10.1093/applin/amad007",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "111--133",
journal = "Applied Linguistics",
issn = "0142-6001",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Climate change in the UK press

T2 - Examining discourse fluctuation over time

AU - Gillings, Mathew

AU - Dayrell, Carmen

PY - 2024/3/7

Y1 - 2024/3/7

N2 - This article examines the discourses around climate change in the UK press from 2003 to 2019. Our main goal is to investigate how the media discourse developed during a period of significant world events, whilst also exploring the change in the UK public’s perception of the problem. We combine the novel technique of Usage Fluctuation Analysis (UFA, McEnery et al. 2019) with corpus-assisted discourse analysis to track the fluctuation in the usage of the phrases climate change and global warming over this 17-year period. Thus, in addition to offering a methodological contribution by applying UFA to a relatively small specialized diachronic corpus, this article offers new insights on how the discourse evolved. Results indicate that the tabloids and broadsheets offer a surprisingly similar image of climate change discourse, both showing two major discoursal shifts. From an overall prevalence of articles advocating for the climate change cause, the discourse incorporated voices of climate sceptics from 2008 onwards, moving on to increased coverage and awareness of the problem in recent years when the public started to engage in it more heavily.

AB - This article examines the discourses around climate change in the UK press from 2003 to 2019. Our main goal is to investigate how the media discourse developed during a period of significant world events, whilst also exploring the change in the UK public’s perception of the problem. We combine the novel technique of Usage Fluctuation Analysis (UFA, McEnery et al. 2019) with corpus-assisted discourse analysis to track the fluctuation in the usage of the phrases climate change and global warming over this 17-year period. Thus, in addition to offering a methodological contribution by applying UFA to a relatively small specialized diachronic corpus, this article offers new insights on how the discourse evolved. Results indicate that the tabloids and broadsheets offer a surprisingly similar image of climate change discourse, both showing two major discoursal shifts. From an overall prevalence of articles advocating for the climate change cause, the discourse incorporated voices of climate sceptics from 2008 onwards, moving on to increased coverage and awareness of the problem in recent years when the public started to engage in it more heavily.

KW - Linguistics and Language

KW - Language and Linguistics

KW - Communication

U2 - 10.1093/applin/amad007

DO - 10.1093/applin/amad007

M3 - Journal article

VL - 45

SP - 111

EP - 133

JO - Applied Linguistics

JF - Applied Linguistics

SN - 0142-6001

IS - 1

ER -