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Research Communication on Climate Change through Open Letters : Uniting Cognition, Affect and Action by Affective Alignments

Graminius, Carin LU (2022) In Science as Culture 31(3). p.334-356
Abstract
Affect is increasingly the object of study in research communication, and inducement of affect by means of different communication techniques is encouraged as a means for mobilizing the public. But a focus on affect in purely instrumental terms risks overlooking the multifaceted ways in which affect is used in research communication. Studying open letters on climate change penned by scientists provides an interesting context for an empirical and theoretical exploration of the intricate ways of using affect in research communication. Two analytical lenses which constitute two strands of research commonly seen as incompatible due to their different units of analysis – affect as linguistic representation and affect as practice – are combined... (More)
Affect is increasingly the object of study in research communication, and inducement of affect by means of different communication techniques is encouraged as a means for mobilizing the public. But a focus on affect in purely instrumental terms risks overlooking the multifaceted ways in which affect is used in research communication. Studying open letters on climate change penned by scientists provides an interesting context for an empirical and theoretical exploration of the intricate ways of using affect in research communication. Two analytical lenses which constitute two strands of research commonly seen as incompatible due to their different units of analysis – affect as linguistic representation and affect as practice – are combined to elucidate the aligning potentials of affect in communicative acts. Affective alignments as representation or practice are significant because affective connections made between actors, objects, actions and understandings are ways of looking at the indirect mobilization of the issue communicated. In relation to research communication, this analytical approach further reveals shifting science-society relations, where social alignments are responding to the nexus of practices in which researchers are situated. Attention to the use of affect in open letters reveals specific configurations between affect, cognition and action as scientists prescribe specific affective states – anxiety and concern – as integral to the understanding and action on climate matters. Furthermore, affect both aligns and separates scientists from other actors in society. Most notably, open letters position politicians as dissociated from scientists and civil society due to their lack of anxiety. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Emotion/affect, Environmental communication, Actor alignments
in
Science as Culture
volume
31
issue
3
pages
24 pages
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • scopus:85126465419
ISSN
0950-5431
DOI
10.1080/09505431.2022.2049597
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
15028e6e-d31f-4942-ac7c-739bc76a4b09
date added to LUP
2022-03-11 09:37:58
date last changed
2024-02-01 20:11:35
@article{15028e6e-d31f-4942-ac7c-739bc76a4b09,
  abstract     = {{Affect is increasingly the object of study in research communication, and inducement of affect by means of different communication techniques is encouraged as a means for mobilizing the public. But a focus on affect in purely instrumental terms risks overlooking the multifaceted ways in which affect is used in research communication. Studying open letters on climate change penned by scientists provides an interesting context for an empirical and theoretical exploration of the intricate ways of using affect in research communication. Two analytical lenses which constitute two strands of research commonly seen as incompatible due to their different units of analysis – affect as linguistic representation and affect as practice – are combined to elucidate the aligning potentials of affect in communicative acts. Affective alignments as representation or practice are significant because affective connections made between actors, objects, actions and understandings are ways of looking at the indirect mobilization of the issue communicated. In relation to research communication, this analytical approach further reveals shifting science-society relations, where social alignments are responding to the nexus of practices in which researchers are situated. Attention to the use of affect in open letters reveals specific configurations between affect, cognition and action as scientists prescribe specific affective states – anxiety and concern – as integral to the understanding and action on climate matters. Furthermore, affect both aligns and separates scientists from other actors in society. Most notably, open letters position politicians as dissociated from scientists and civil society due to their lack of anxiety.}},
  author       = {{Graminius, Carin}},
  issn         = {{0950-5431}},
  keywords     = {{Emotion/affect; Environmental communication; Actor alignments}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{03}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{334--356}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Science as Culture}},
  title        = {{Research Communication on Climate Change through Open Letters : Uniting Cognition, Affect and Action by Affective Alignments}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09505431.2022.2049597}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/09505431.2022.2049597}},
  volume       = {{31}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}