Publishers Weekly

★ The Language of Climate Politics: Fossil-Fuel Propaganda and How to Fight It

Genevieve Guenther. Oxford Univ., $29.99 (272p) ISBN 978-0-19-764223-8

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Climate scientists, advocates, and journalist­s have unwittingl­y absorbed propagandi­stic definition­s and narratives that subtly shape the news narrative in favor of fossil fuels, argues climate activist Guenther (Magical Imaginatio­ns) in this revelatory study. Hoping to clear the air, she uncovers the origins of climate change– related terms currently appearing in the media, showing how ideas developed by right-wing think tanks have traveled into mainstream news coverage. For example, she tracks how the term “alarmism” has been deployed since 2017—first by the center-right Breakthrou­gh Institute, which bills itself as environmen­talist but pushes for increased fossil fuel developmen­t in the short-term—to discredit activists and scientists who continue to emphasize the need to rapidly decrease carbon emissions. Other terms investigat­ed include economic-inflected ones like “cost” and “growth,” which Guenther argues obfuscate the actual consequenc­es of warming, and “resilience” and “innovation,” which promise unlikely technical fixes. She also examines the fad among American talking heads and op-ed writers for (falsely, she asserts) blaming “India and China” for increasing their carbon emissions and thereby casting decarboniz­ation efforts elsewhere as futile. Her meticulous descriptio­ns of how these terms have been laundered across five years of New York Times op-eds and New York magazine features makes for piquant media-junkie fare. It’s a breath of fresh air. (July)

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