Frontiers in Communication (Jun 2022)

Tracking Memes in the Wild: Visual Rhetoric and Image Circulation in Environmental Communication

  • Madison Jones,
  • Madison Jones,
  • Madison Jones,
  • Aaron Beveridge,
  • Julian R. Garrison,
  • Julian R. Garrison,
  • Abbey Greene,
  • Abbey Greene,
  • Hannah MacDonald,
  • Hannah MacDonald

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2022.883278
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Drawing on recent scholarship in environmental communication and rhetoric, this essay examines the role of visual circulation in digital environmental discourse. We argue that while environmental image circulation is often viewed as an ambivalent, or even performative, practice for environmental citizenship, it is also an important space for cultivating participatory culture online. Adapting a version of Laurie Gries' “Iconographic Tracking” method, we offer three case studies that demonstrate how the digital circulation of environmental memes and iconic images offers important tactics for engaging digital publics that can be deployed by public communication practitioners. Subsequently, we argue for a more nuanced view of image circulation as both a performative and a participatory strategy for environmental communication.

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