Encoding and Decoding Story, Place, and Self: Towards Situated Environmental Journalism in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Publicado en:ProQuest Dissertations and Theses (2025)
Autor principal: Mira, Beatriz Sprada
Publicado:
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Materias:
Acceso en línea:Citation/Abstract
Full Text - PDF
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!

MARC

LEADER 00000nab a2200000uu 4500
001 3262012113
003 UK-CbPIL
020 |a 9798297641686 
035 |a 3262012113 
045 2 |b d20250101  |b d20251231 
084 |a 66569  |2 nlm 
100 1 |a Mira, Beatriz Sprada 
245 1 |a Encoding and Decoding Story, Place, and Self: Towards Situated Environmental Journalism in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest 
260 |b ProQuest Dissertations & Theses  |c 2025 
513 |a Dissertation/Thesis 
520 3 |a The Brazilian state of Paraná hosts the largest remaining stretch of the critically endangered Atlantic Forest, or Nhe’ẽry, in the original Guarani language, where multiple environmental threats render coastal residents as especially vulnerable. Mainstream Brazilian environmental journalism has been described as superficial, lacking in source diversity, and as a violent field where specialized training is scarce. I draw from Hall’s (1990) Encoding/Decoding model, Cantrill and Senecah’s (2001) concept of sense of self-in-place, and Zelizer’s (1993) interpretive communities framework to investigate the production and consumption of environmental journalism in the Paraná coast. The reflexive thematic analysis (Braun & Clarke, 2022) of 569 pages of data–including the transcripts of 33 in-depth interviews with local journalists and residents, relevant documents, memos, and fieldnotes from newsroom and community observation–rendered three themes and ten subthemes related to encoding, decoding, and possible futures. All journalists expressed a great deal of care for the environmental beat and are often frustrated with place-based, structural, and editorial limitations that impede them from producing the coverage they aim for. Community members are often portrayed as only hosts, victims, and villains of their own environmental stories, within a coverage that generally falls into a tourism or tragedy binary and conforms with a colonial narrative that undermines the socioenvironmental power of these communities and alienates them from relevant environmental matters. Community members’ complex and, at times, paradoxical relationships with place were central to their decoding processes. Most had overwhelmingly positive experiences with journalists and were eager to build better relationships with local media, as they were optimistic about the transformative power of a more critical and representative coverage that they envision as place-based, solutions- oriented, and that emphasizes positive examples of pro-environmental behavior. I argue that the “self- in-place” must be considered as a defining variable in investigations of encoding and decoding processes, and I offer place-based recommendations on how local communicators can achieve the coverage they desire. Findings are being used in the co- creation of a culturally situated environmental journalism guide, in collaboration with a community advisory board, which will be available for free to local media-makers. 
653 |a Journalism 
653 |a Environmental studies 
653 |a Communication 
653 |a Environmental justice 
653 |a Environmental science 
773 0 |t ProQuest Dissertations and Theses  |g (2025) 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global 
856 4 1 |3 Citation/Abstract  |u https://www.proquest.com/docview/3262012113/abstract/embedded/ZKJTFFSVAI7CB62C?source=fedsrch 
856 4 0 |3 Full Text - PDF  |u https://www.proquest.com/docview/3262012113/fulltextPDF/embedded/ZKJTFFSVAI7CB62C?source=fedsrch