Publication | Open Access
Dead White men vs. Greta Thunberg: Nationalism, Misogyny, and Climate Change Denial in Swedish far-right Digital Media
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Citations
33
References
2021
Year
EcofeminismDead White MenContemporary CultureFeminist DebateMedia StudiesSocial SciencesCensorshipMedia ActivismGender IdentityFeminist ResearchGender StudiesPolitical CommunicationPost-truthClimate ChangeMedia InstitutionsFeminist ScholarshipIdentity PoliticsSchool StrikeFeminist PerspectiveFeminist ScienceFeminist Political TheoryCritical TheoryFeminist TheoryGreta ThunbergFeminist MethodologiesFeminist Medium StudyClimate Change DenialFeminist Rhetorical TheoryMass CommunicationArts
In the autumn of 2018 Greta Thunberg started her school strike. Soon she and the Fridays For Future-movement rose to world-fame, stirring a backlash laying bare the intrinsic climate change denial of Swedish far-right digital media. These outlets had previously been almost silent on climate change, but in 2019, four of the ten most read articles on the site Samhällsnytt were about Thunberg, all of them discrediting the movement and spreading doubt about climate science. Using the conceptualisation of industrial/breadwinner masculinities as developed by Hultman and Pulé [2018. Ecological Masculinities: Theoretical Foundations and Practical Guidance. Routledge Studies in Gender and Environments. New York: Routledge], this article analyses what provoked this reaction. It explores how the hostility to Thunberg was constructed in far-right media discourse in the years 2018–2019, when she became a threat to an imagined industrial, homogenic and patriarchal community. Using conspiracy theories and historical tropes of irrational femininity, the far right was trying to protect the usually hidden environmental privileges, related to unequal carbon emissions and resource use, that Thunberg and her movement made visible.
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