TY - JOUR
T1 - Climate Justice Literacy: Stories-We-Live-By, Ecolinguistics, and Classroom Practice
AU - Damico, James S.
AU - Baildon, Mark
AU - Panos, Alexandra
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PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Literacy educators can guide students to examine the stories we live by, or the larger narratives that guide individual and collective sensemaking about relationships between humans and the environment. Drawing from the field of ecolinguistics, the authors consider two ecologically destructive stories we live by: Humans are the center of existence, and consumerism is a main pathway to happiness and fulfillment. The authors also explore three intersecting beneficial stories we live by that center on indigenous perspectives, feminist foundations of climate justice, and youth activism. This work is rooted in three essential understandings about climate change: It is a complex socioscientific topic and escalating problem, engaging with climate change is mediated primarily by a complicated array of motivated digital texts and motivated readers, and climate change is about climate (in)justice. The authors conclude with ideas about being a climate justice literacy educator.
AB - Literacy educators can guide students to examine the stories we live by, or the larger narratives that guide individual and collective sensemaking about relationships between humans and the environment. Drawing from the field of ecolinguistics, the authors consider two ecologically destructive stories we live by: Humans are the center of existence, and consumerism is a main pathway to happiness and fulfillment. The authors also explore three intersecting beneficial stories we live by that center on indigenous perspectives, feminist foundations of climate justice, and youth activism. This work is rooted in three essential understandings about climate change: It is a complex socioscientific topic and escalating problem, engaging with climate change is mediated primarily by a complicated array of motivated digital texts and motivated readers, and climate change is about climate (in)justice. The authors conclude with ideas about being a climate justice literacy educator.
KW - Text types
KW - text features Content literacy
KW - Critical analysis Digital/media literacies
KW - Information literacy Digital/media literacies
KW - Specific media (hypertext
KW - Internet
KW - film
KW - music
KW - etc.) Digital/media literacies
KW - Linguistics Language learners
KW - Critical literacy Theoretical perspectives
KW - Popular culture Digital/media literacies
KW - Content literacy
KW - Digital/media literacies
KW - Identity
KW - Teacher education; professional development
KW - 3-Early adolescence
KW - 4-Adolescence
KW - 5-College/university students
KW - 6-Adult
UR - https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/tal_facpub/691
UR - https://doi.org/10.1002/jaal.1051
UR - https://ila.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/jaal.1051
U2 - 10.1002/jaal.1051
DO - 10.1002/jaal.1051
M3 - Article
VL - 63
JO - Journal of Adolescent Adult Literacy
JF - Journal of Adolescent Adult Literacy
ER -