ABSTRACT

In the two decades bracketing the turn of the millennium, large-scale weather disasters have been inevitably constructed as media events. As such, they challenge the meaning of concepts such as identity and citizenship for both locally affected populations and widespread spectator communities. This timely collection pinpoints the features of an often overlooked yet rapidly expanding category of global media and analyzes both its forms and functions. Specifically, contributors argue that the intense promotion and consumption of 'extreme weather' events takes up the slack for the public conversations society is not having about the environment, and the feeling of powerlessness that accompanies the realization that anthropogenic climate change has now reached a point of no return. Incorporating a range of case studies of extreme weather mediation in India, the UK, Germany, Sweden, the US, and Japan, and exploring recent and ongoing disasters such as Superstorm Sandy, the Fukushima nuclear crisis, flooding in Germany, and heat waves in the UK, Extreme Weather and Global Media generates valuable inquiry into the representational and social characteristics of the new culture of extreme weather.

chapter |28 pages

Introduction

Extreme Weather and Global Media

chapter 1|20 pages

Televising Superstorm Sandy

New Configurations of Poverty and Neoliberalism in Extreme Weather Coverage

chapter 2|25 pages

The Eye of the Storm

CCTV, Surveillance, and Media Representations of Extreme Weather

chapter 3|26 pages

Picturing High Water

The 2013 Floods in Southeastern Germany and Colorado

chapter 4|27 pages

“Blowtorch Britain”

Labor, Heat, and Neo-Victorian Values in Contemporary UK Media

chapter 5|17 pages

Post-Political Crisis Management

Representations of Extreme Weather in Swedish Media

chapter 6|19 pages

Disaster Data, Data Activism

Grassroots Responses to Representing Superstorm Sandy

chapter 7|28 pages

Mangoes and Monsoons

South Asian Media Coverage of Environmental Spectacles

chapter 8|23 pages

Rain with a Chance of Radiation

Forecasting Local and Global Risk after Fukushima