Letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions

Perceptions of environmental issues can be shaped by using framing techniques or by the type of environmental discourse used. The emotional experience to narratives of environmental change can also be shaped by how environmental issues are presented. This paper investigated how types of environmenta...

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Main Author: Teo, Jing Kai
Other Authors: Michael David Gumert
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156989
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1569892023-03-05T15:46:35Z Letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions Teo, Jing Kai Michael David Gumert School of Social Sciences Gumert@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology Social sciences::Recreation Perceptions of environmental issues can be shaped by using framing techniques or by the type of environmental discourse used. The emotional experience to narratives of environmental change can also be shaped by how environmental issues are presented. This paper investigated how types of environmental discourse shape an individual’s preference for a narrative. Both climate change and plastic pollution were used to assess how people respond to environmental discourse. The environmental discourse use was expected to affect one’s response to embody key ideas of the environmental discourse. Additionally, the link between environmental discourse and emotions was investigated. It investigates how (i) survivalism affects eco-grief, eco-anxiety and eco-anger; (ii) economic rationalism affects eco-apathy; (iii) green romanticism affects eco-hope. Study 1 involved 27 Singaporean undergraduates, while Study 2 involved 126 American citizens, participants completed an online questionnaire exploring the relationships between environmental discourse, emotions, and pro-environmental behaviors. The study failed to find direct evidence linking environmental discourse to emotions, environmental issue was shown not to have differing results in relation to the type of environmental discourse exposed. Additionally, reading a specific type of environmental discourse influences support for that environmental discourse is reflected only in Study 1, not Study 2. Discussions of the two research studies, implications of the findings, and future directions were considered. Bachelor of Social Sciences in Psychology 2022-05-05T07:59:20Z 2022-05-05T07:59:20Z 2022 Final Year Project (FYP) Teo, J. K. (2022). Letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156989 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156989 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Social sciences::Recreation
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Social sciences::Recreation
Teo, Jing Kai
Letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions
description Perceptions of environmental issues can be shaped by using framing techniques or by the type of environmental discourse used. The emotional experience to narratives of environmental change can also be shaped by how environmental issues are presented. This paper investigated how types of environmental discourse shape an individual’s preference for a narrative. Both climate change and plastic pollution were used to assess how people respond to environmental discourse. The environmental discourse use was expected to affect one’s response to embody key ideas of the environmental discourse. Additionally, the link between environmental discourse and emotions was investigated. It investigates how (i) survivalism affects eco-grief, eco-anxiety and eco-anger; (ii) economic rationalism affects eco-apathy; (iii) green romanticism affects eco-hope. Study 1 involved 27 Singaporean undergraduates, while Study 2 involved 126 American citizens, participants completed an online questionnaire exploring the relationships between environmental discourse, emotions, and pro-environmental behaviors. The study failed to find direct evidence linking environmental discourse to emotions, environmental issue was shown not to have differing results in relation to the type of environmental discourse exposed. Additionally, reading a specific type of environmental discourse influences support for that environmental discourse is reflected only in Study 1, not Study 2. Discussions of the two research studies, implications of the findings, and future directions were considered.
author2 Michael David Gumert
author_facet Michael David Gumert
Teo, Jing Kai
format Final Year Project
author Teo, Jing Kai
author_sort Teo, Jing Kai
title Letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions
title_short Letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions
title_full Letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions
title_fullStr Letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions
title_full_unstemmed Letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions
title_sort letting nature speak: differential impacts of reacting environmental issues on environmental discourses & emotions
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/156989
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