China’s Green Public Culture: Network Pragmatics and the Environment

Authors

  • Jingfang Liu Fudan University
  • G. Thomas Goodnight Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism University of Southern California

Keywords:

public culture, environmentalism, China, network pragmatics, dissensus, Anthropocene

Abstract

The rates of environmental degradation and climate change accelerate and challenge taken-for-granted practices of living across the planet. China’s recent “smogpocalypse” illustrates how disruptive ecoevents necessitate complex, urgent alternatives and exchange. In this essay, we propose and analyze China’s Green Public Culture in terms of its players, networks, media, action, strategy, discourses, and cultural norm. The divergent communication activities of 21st-century green public culture in China are assembled as network pragmatics that cultivate experience, connect practices, tie alliances, express differences, and circulate controversy. Thus, we identify distinctive, emerging networks of cooperation and contestation, the vectors of dissensus that bid to generate and shape resources requisite for living in the Anthropocene.

Author Biographies

Jingfang Liu, Fudan University

Assistant Professor

G. Thomas Goodnight, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism University of Southern California

Professor

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Published

2016-10-28

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Articles