Contents
Introduction: Wild Hope at the Crossroads of Climate and Crisis | Emma Frances Bloomfield, José Castro-Sotomayor, Stacey K. Sowards, Mehita Iqani, and Patrick D. Murphy
Intersectionality as Resilience and Resignification
Indigenous Women’s Movements in the Global South: Digital Solidarities as Tools for Environmental Hope around the World | Joanne Marras Tate and Denise Fernandes
The Inspirational Super-Greta: Eco-Ableism and Ethos of the Greta Thunberg Effect | Marcia Clare Allison
Indigenous Activism and Metaphors of Inversion in Awake, a Dream from Standing Rock | Alyssa Kahn
Understanding Energy and the Creation of Complicit Energy Consumers in South Korea | Su Young Choi
Tracing the Rhetorical Force of Rumors across Wild Public Networks | Elizabeth Brunner
Intersectionality as Performance and Power
Celebritizing Activism: Mainstream Media Coverage of Jane Fonda’s Fire Drill Fridays | Mollie K. Murphy
Locating the Sub-Saharan Ecological Jeremiad: Young Environmental Activists in Wangari Maathai’s Footsteps | Emmanuel Septime Sessou
Eros and Polity in Intersectional Environmental Activism | José Castro-Sotomayor
Framing/Enacting Environmental Justice: Colonial Ventriloquism and the Rhetoric of Nemonte Nenquimo | Diana Isabel Martínez
Responding to Abusive Arguments: Climate Skeptical Attacks on Intersectional Environmental Activists’ Credibility | Emma Frances Bloomfield
Intersectionality as Agency and Action
Leave No One Behind: Techno-Ecofeminism, Intersectional Youth Climate Justice, and Green Hope | Heather M. Crandall and Carolyn M. Cunningham
Apocalyptic Subjectivities: Representations of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, “The Squad,” and Climate Justice Activists in US Media | Hanna E. Morris
Responding to the Anthropocene: On-the-Ground Work at the Asian Rural Institute | Samantha Senda-Cook
Ecomodernist Discourse and Paternalistic Barriers to Participation | Casey R. Schmitt
Conclusion: Environmental Communication’s Intersectionality | Norie R. Singer
About the Contributors
Index