Monday, December 25, 2017

PINNED BLOG NOTE: Beginning Christmas Day 2017 and officially as of January 1, 2018, I am taking a year-long break from this blog and working on a nonfiction book about the rise of the cli-fi genre over the past decade or so. See you in 2019!






PINNED BLOG NOTE: Beginning Christmas Day 2017 and officially as of January 1, 2018, I am taking a year-long break from this blog and working on a nonfiction book about the rise of the cli-fi genre over the past decade or so. However, these pages will remain up and you are welcome to post comments on past posts and share book news and climate points of view across the spectrum. For writers looking for more help with placing their novels and marketing them and discussing the ins and outs of the publishing business, my colleague Mary Woodbury in Canada runs a very good literary site devoted to nature writing and climate change novels and you can find a lot of good advice there at her website via www.clifibooks.com [She runs a very good Google+ community chat group there, open to anyone, and she also has a new site devoted to novelists looking for advice of PR and marketing of their climate change themed novels and short stories at] http://dragonfly.eco/


[SEE YOU ON THE OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT in 2019! Cheers, Dan]




NOTES:
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6 Fun Facts About Climate Fiction (Cli-Fi)



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Climate fiction (cli-fi) is a broad genre that includes all fiction that references the climate in some significant way. Most cli-fi explores human-caused climate change and its impact on humanity and the Earth in the present or future.
Telling stories about climate change helps us understand this big, impersonal, long-term trend in more immediate and personal ways. Charts and graphs are great when we want to understand the details of the science, but storytelling really helps us make sense of it all as human beings. It allows us to experience climate change through the eyes of deeply human characters with complex hopes, dreams, and fears that may speak to our own feelings about the realities of climate change. A good cli-fi story entertains us while also helping us figure out what climate change means for us as individuals, communities, and human societies.
Cli-fi is growing in popularity because the consequences of climate change are becoming more obvious and serious with each passing day. More authors are writing cli-fi, and more readers are looking for it. In honor of this growing trend, here are a few fun facts about cli-fi.

(1) Cli-Fi Isn’t New

Depending on how you define the genre, cli-fi is nothing new. In 1889, Jules Verne published a novel called The Purchase of the North Pole that explores the idea of using a cannon to alter the Earth’s tilt on its axis and thus alter the global climate.
Many authors in the early to mid-twentieth century wrote stories about catastrophic (but fictional) shifts in the global climate. J.G. Ballard, author of High-Rise, published several well-known novels featuring such climate catastrophes. The Wind From Nowhere and The Drowned World explore purely natural climate catastrophes, while The Drought explores a climate catastrophe caused by human beings (but not via greenhouse gas emissions).
These early works portray purely fictional changes in the Earth’s climate. In contrast, most contemporary cli-fi explores the implications of the real-world crisis of human-caused climate change.

(2) Cli-Fi Is More Than Just Dystopian Post-Apocalyptic Fiction

Given the realities of climate change in the real world, it’s not surprising that many cli-fi stories contain strong dystopian and post-apocalyptic elements. The biggest stereotype about cli-fi is that it’s basically the climate-based equivalent of zombie fiction. Human civilization has collapsed; the cities have been destroyed by climate wars and rising tides; large swaths of land have become uninhabitable; grim bands of weary survivors roam the wastelands struggling just to find food and shelter.
When it’s done well, this gritty take on the genre can be an immensely rewarding, thought-provoking, and downright chilling experience. Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam Trilogy and Paolo Bacigalupi’s The Windup Girl and The Water Knife take place in dystopian societies in a future mid-apocalyptic or post-apocalyptic setting. These novels are some of the most engaging and thought-provoking examples of the dystopian and post-apocalyptic trend in the genre
However, if dystopian fiction and post-apocalyptic fiction aren’t your cup of tea, there are plenty of other options.
If you like stories about climate science and space travel, the award-winning Mars Trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson is a great exploration of the intersection between climate, science, technology, ethics, politics, and the colonization of space. Instead of addressing climate change on Earth, the series explores the implication of terraforming on Mars.
Kim Stanley Robinson’s later cli-fi addresses human-caused climate change much more directly. The Science in the Capital Trilogy (also available in abridged form as a single novel) explores the real-world science and politics of climate change through the lens of a colorful cast of characters at the intersection of science and public policy in Washington D.C. His most recent novel, New York 2140, is both a love letter to the city of New York and a remarkably broad and deep exploration of what society might be like a hundred years from now. It portrays a world that has been significantly affected by climate change, yet it does so in a way that is very realistic, non-apocalyptic, and in many ways encouraging without ignoring the dark side of climate change or pushing any simplistic or easy answers.

(3) Cli-Fi Has Some Big-Name Authors

The terms “climate fiction” and “cli-fi” haven’t fully gained traction among big publishers or marketers yet. But several big-name authors have written books with climate-related themes.
Barbara Kingsolver, author of The Poisonwood Bible, has a literary cli-fi novel called Flight Behavior. Margaret Atwood, author of The Handmaid’s Tale, incorporates elements of climate fiction into her popular MaddAddam Triology. As I mentioned above, sci-fi legend Kim Stanley Robinson has published numerous novels related to climate science and increasingly human-caused climate change.
On a sad and frustrating note, Michael Crichton, author of Jurassic Park, is one of the most famous authors to publish a novel addressing human-caused climate change. Unfortunately, his novel is a ridiculous climate science denialist screed, complete with footnotes and an author’s message containing misleading information that has been debunked by the Union for Concerned Scientists and many other scientists, including some of the very scientists whose work he misrepresents. Therefore, I won’t link to it, and I highly recommend that you avoid it!

(4) Cli-Fi and Its Crossovers

Cli-fi is rarely just about the climate. It’s usually what I call “Cli-Fi Plus” — cli-fi plus sci-fi, cli-fi plus biopunkcli-fi plus contemporary fantasy, cli-fi plus zombies, cli-fi plus refugee fiction, literary cli-fi, etc. One of my goals as a cli-fi reader, viewer, and author is to explore as many of these crossovers as I can to discover just how many diverse and engaging stories we can tell about climate change!
Why do so many cli-fi authors cross over into other genres? Maybe it’s because climate change is such a big theme that it touches every other aspect of our lives. Or maybe it’s because cli-fi is still an emerging genre that needs the support of other genres to draw in new readers and viewers. Either way, it’s exciting and rewarding to see so many crossovers with some of my other favorite genres.

(5) Cli-Fi Isn’t Just Novels

Most people who have heard of cli-fi think of it as a novel genre. This may be because the barriers to publishing a good novel — especially an indie or self-published novel — are much lower than the barriers to producing a good full-length film or TV series. Therefore, cli-fi novels are easier to create than cli-fi films or television. This is especially true given the fact that many cli-fi plots would require special effects or visual effects that stretch or break the budgets of smaller independent producers. However, there are many examples of films, TV shows, and other media that either focus on climate change or address it in some significant way
The most famous and heavy-handed cli-fi film to date is arguably The Day After Tomorrow. The film is very loosely based on the real-world projection that human-caused climate change might disrupt thermohaline circulation in the ocean, thus leading to serious and largely harmful consequences. Of course, given the fact that it was a major Hollywood disaster film, the details were exaggerated to the point of complete scientific inaccuracy. However, in spite of its failings, many people concerned about climate change saw the film as a good opportunity to talk about climate change in real life, especially given the big-name cast, impressive visual effects, and exciting plot that gave it broad appeal with the general public.
Other prominent examples of cli-fi films include Waterworld (catastrophic sea level rise); Snowpiercer (geoengineering gone horribly awry); Interstellar (fleeing a world succumbing to climate change); The Thaw (thawing permafrost releases a deadly parasite); Moana (a light-handed allegory for climate change); Mother! (another allegory for climate change); and even The Hunger Games (although there’s even less mention of this in the films than there is in the books).
The TV series Years of Living Dangerously is a nonfiction documentary, but it uses high production values and the conventions of dramatic storytelling to provide the viewer with the same exciting and compelling experience that they might have watching a fictional drama or thriller. Utopia is a rather violent series about a global conspiracy that seeks to address climate change and other environmental issues. Surprisingly, some classic TV series from the 80s and 90s had episodes related to fictional forms of climate change, including Star Trek and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
There are also a growing number of climate fiction short stories. The two best cli-fi anthologies I’ve found so far are Everything Change and Loosed Upon The World. I also plan on publishing my own cli-fi anthology in 2018!

(6) Cli-Fi Is The Next Big Thing

Cli-Fi has been around in some form for over a century. However, now that human-caused climate change is having an increasing impact on our lives, a growing number of people are reading, watching, and writing stories about it. These stories are definitely entertaining, but they’re more than just idle entertainment. They’re a way of breaking the climate silence and coming to terms on a personal level with human-caused climate change.
Stay tuned to this blog for more news about cli-fi! Follow me on Facebook, Twitter, and Patreon to stay up-to-date on my latest cli-fi releases and Real Life Superhero adventures. Sign up for my newsletter to receive free cli-fi in your inbox. And share this post to let all of your friends know six fun facts about climate fiction!


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Witches, Zombies, and 'Cli-Fi' Mysteries





by Molly Karr class of 2018
CORNELL UNIVERSITY

Photo by Anna Carmichael
Freshman author studies ‘Elements’ of chemistry and storytelling
By Kathy Hovis
Molly Karr ’18, has a pretty full day planned, between attending classes, rehearsing for a play and finishing a story for the Cornell Daily...
MOLLY KARR
Photo by Anna Carmichael

Cornell student studies ‘Elements’ of chemistry and storytelling

By Kathy Hovis
Molly Karr class of 2018, has a pretty full day planned, between attending classes, rehearsing for a play and finishing a story for the Cornell Daily Sun.
But she tries to make a little time for her favorite activity —writing — either in her dorm room or Olin Library.
Karr has already finished a young adult science fiction novel, “Elements,” which she’s editing and sending out to literary agents. The book was a high school project that incorporated her interest in science and her love of creative writing.
“I’m always thinking about characters and people and how they’re interacting with each other,” said Karr, who’s from the Chicago suburb of Northbrook.
Read more about how Karr made her story scientifically accurate — and read an excerpt from the book.

Featured Subject for Interview:



This is not the first time Kristen Angierski class of 2012 has been an enrolled student at Cornell. Before the fourth-year English PhD student began studying climate change fiction and ecogothic aesthetics in 2014, Angierski had received her BA in English from Cornell in 2012. In between, she received her master’s degree from SUNY Buffalo, near her hometown.
In high school, Angierski found solace in books and enjoyed her English courses, but applied to Cornell as an undergraduate archaeology and French major. “I got here and did the work, but I would always procrastinate by reading novels. It was a sign. I should be studying literature because that’s where my heart is. The rest is history,” Angierski reminisces.

A Growing Interest in Academic Eco-criticism

While a master’s student at SUNY Buffalo, she discovered her passion for eco-criticism—literary criticism that takes the natural world into account. This, paired with her love of animals and environmental politics, inspired her to pursue doctoral study in the environmental humanities.
Angierski knew that a plethora of resources would be available to her at Cornell, a leading university in environmental research with a well-established English PhD program. While it is somewhat unusual for an undergraduate English major to be accepted back into the PhD program at Cornell, Angierski was the perfect fit.
“I think the English department here is remarkable. The program gives you the freedom to kind of do whatever you want to do, to take classes in whichever department you like. This is especially helpful for my interdisciplinary style of research. The faculty is also very supportive and open; they put their trust in you as a scholar,” Angierski says.
“I had a much clearer idea of what I wanted to do after receiving my master’s. I knew that I wanted to think ecologically about literature and become a part of that ever-growing community here,” says Angierski, who stressed that blending every aspect of oneself into the work one wants to do is needed to get through the gruelling process of obtaining a PhD. “Passion pulls you through the tougher moments.”

Cli-Fi, Climate Change Fiction

Angierski’s research at Cornell centers on climate change fiction—cli-fi, for short. “It’s different from, but indebted to, traditional science fiction, which may or may not have an ecological focus. I am especially interested in novels and films that have been made in the past 20 years, including movies like The Hunger Games, Mad Max: Fury Road, and The Witch,” says Angierski.
Angierski’s work examines how the literary world is responding to environmental instability, especially climate change but eco-disasters as well. More specifically, she works on the Gothic aesthetics of cli-fi, identifying patterns in the fiction and thinking about why they might matter ecologically, politically, and culturally.
One important aspect of Angierski’s research is that it bridges the gap between scientific data and artistic production—for a political purpose. “Climate change and its future are hard to see, to imagine, to feel (here in Ithaca, at least). If you look around today, the sun is shining, the sky is blue. Nothing appears obviously wrong. Climate change fiction and film can fill in this imaginative gap in a way that data alone cannot,” explains Angierski.

Fear and Occulture in Contemporary Culture

The day-to-day work of cli-fi and ecogothic research involves lots of reading, from climate change fiction, to literary ecocriticism, to archival reading in Cornell’s Witchcraft archive. Angierski’s first dissertation chapter is on the figure of the witch and witchcraft in cli-fi. Angierski thinks a lot about how cli-fi relies on the legacy of Gothic literature—which consists of things, such as ghosts, haunted mansions, witches, zombies—and tries to understand why it matters. Fear might be part of the answer.
Indeed, Angierski also studies fear and its political potential, resisting the knee jerk assumption in some critical circles that fear is always, inherently bad.
“You look at something like the resurging interest in witch occulture and craft right now, especially among young women, and it’s not accidental. In a fear-filled age, we turn to fearsome figures for guidance, for solace, for resistance.”
“The escalation of environmental and political volatility in this country and elsewhere causes fear, especially for marginalized people. I think you look at something like the resurging interest in witch occulture and craft right now, especially among young women, and it’s not accidental. In a fear-filled age, we turn to fearsome figures for guidance, for solace, for resistance,” Angierski says.
Gothic themes—tarot cards, crystals, spells—are much more prevalent in contemporary culture than one might assume. A quick Instagram search makes it clear that interest in witchy magic is widespread. “I examine these pop culture manifestations of occulture, which often have a natural component like using certain herbs for spells, and ask what it might be saying about ecological politics,” says Angierski.
Ironically, one positive aspect to Angierski’s research on ecogothic as a genre is that it has the potential to teach its readers about coping with fear. Ecogothic fiction can theorize a counter-intuitive politics of acceptance in the current political landscape.
“Fear can be productive rather than paralysing. A lot of ecogothic fiction isn’t really about overcoming fear or coming out of disaster absolutely okay; it’s not about the happy ending. It often, like Gothic fiction, is ambivalent. That state of ambivalence, existing with the terrors of climate change for instance, is something that can actually be politically productive,” Angierski says.
Angierski was at first surprised by the prevalence of supernatural themes in climate change fiction, a genre one might expect to be predominantly realist. “You wouldn’t necessarily open a book about climate change expecting ghosts, witches, spells—seeing the supernatural all over the natural. But there it was,” explains Angierski.

In Addition to Research in the Environmental Humanities

When Angierski isn’t knee-deep in literature, she enjoys going for a hike, visiting the local SPCA, or watching horror films with her cat, Milo. Angierski, with a fellow graduate student, also began an environmental humanities reading group on campus.
One of the most rewarding aspects about getting a PhD is teaching the next generation of undergraduates at Cornell. “Teaching about climate change and animal rights is a means by which I make, I think, a real impact—one that grows exponentially as my students talk to their peers and parents about the issues we study in class,” says Angierski.
Although Angierski despises the word trendy, she concedes that the type of work she is doing is becoming increasingly popular and, perhaps unfortunately, important. “Occasionally, the humanities are looked at by the sciences as mere communication, but the environmental humanities are far more complicated than that. I believe the sciences and humanities really need each other, especially now, in the face of climate change. We need art and data, and data as art—a genuine alliance that, while it might not save us, it can maybe help us imagine how to adapt, creatively and ethically,” says Angierski.

"Cli-Fi Novels and Movies in the Anthrocene'' featuring David Wallace-Wells, Nathan Kensinger and Jeff VanderMeer


A Conversation Series in NYC in 2018:


''The Art and Activism of the Anthrocene''

Climate change is already happening. Around the world, scientists, novelists, film directors and activists are addressing it in media from cli-fi novels and movies to live theater. This series brings together novelists, writers, journalists, and theater artists in robust discussions on how they address climate change - and why their work is important in the Anthrocene.

Don't Shoot the Messenger: The Challenging Narratives of Climate Change

with William T. Vollman, Chantal Bilodeau, and David Wallace-Wells
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 6:30 pm
These panelists approach climate-change dialogues through different mediums - book-length and magazine journalism, and through theater. They'll discuss their approach to gathering stories, their thoughts on why these stories matter, and the challenges they've faced when shaping issues of climate change into digestible narratives for the public.

Strange Realities: Art and Activism in Transitional Environments

with Jeff VanderMeer, Zaria Forman, Gleb Raygorodetsky, and Victoria Tauli-Corpuz
THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 6:30 PM
Jeff VanderMeer, author of the Southern Reach trilogy, speaks with visual artist Zaria Forman, conservation biologist Gleb Raygorodetsky, and Indigenous leader Victoria Tauli-Corpuz about "transitional environments" - regions of land undergoing change so dramatic they're barely recognizable. They will discuss how art and activism can bring greater awareness to the communities and environs most vulnerable to the effects of climate change.

Imagining the Impossible: The Role of Feature Films and Novels in Understanding Climate Change

with Amitav Ghosh, Helen Phillips, and Nathan Kensinger
WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 6:30 PM
Authors Amitav Ghosh and Helen Phillips talks with photographer and filmmaker Nathan Kensinger about the role novelists and artists play in helping others to better imagine the effects of climate change.



All events take place at the New York Society Library, 53 East 79th Street

These events are open to the public and free of charge, but registration is required. To register, contact the Library's Events Office at events@nysoclib.org or 212.288.6900 x230. Library members may also register online.

https://ny.curbed.com/2017/5/18/15655518/new-york-2140-climate-fiction-photo-essay

Sunday, December 24, 2017

''Audience Reactions to Climate Change and Science in Disaster Cli-fi Films: A Qualitative Analysis'' article by Lauren Griffin PhD


L. Griffin @lngriffin25
tweets

Her article is out and published

''Audience Reactions to Climate Change and Science in Disaster Cli-fi Films: A Qualitative Analysis''







Journal of Public Interest Communications, Vol. 1 Issue 2, 2017
Introduction
The mass media are a crucial source of information regarding the causes and predicted effects of
anthropogenic climate change for many people (J. M. Boykoff & Boykoff, 2007; M. T. Boykoff
& Rajan, 2007; Brulle, Carmichael, & Jenkins, 2012; Corbett & Durfee, 2004). As a result,
researchers have begun to analyze the discourse surrounding climate change in the media,
particularly the news media. Although these studies have produced valuable information, they do
not address the effects of non-news media—namely, fictional narratives—on climate change
attitudes and beliefs.
Audience Reactions to Climate Change and Science in
Disaster Cli-fi Films: A Qualitative Analysis
Lauren N. Griffin
University of Florida
Article Information
Received: July 17, 2017
Accepted: October 8, 2017
Published online: December 20, 2017
Abstract
Little scholarly attention has been paid to how audiences
interpret pop culture messages about climate. This paper
addresses this issue by taking up the case of disaster cli-fi
films and exploring how audiences react to film
representations of climate change. It draws on data from
focus groups to evaluate audience responses to disaster
cli-fi films. Analysis reveals that by only briefly
discussing climate change in their plotlines, the films
weaken their environmental message. The paper
concludes with a discussion of the effects of disaster cli-fi
films on environmental attitudes and suggestions for
further research.
Journal of Public Interest Communications
ISSN (online): 2573-4342
Journal homepage:
http://journals.fcla.edu/jpic/
Keywords
Climate change
Narratives
Mass media
Public understanding of science
Focus Groups
*Please send correspondences about this article to Lauren N. Griffin, College of Journalism and
Communications, University of Florida. E-mail:
lngriffin@ufl.edu. Copyright Griffin 2017. This work is
licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of
this license, visit
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/orsend a letter to Creative Commons, PO
Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA.
Griffin, Audience Reactions to Climate Change, JPIC, Vol. 1 Issue 2 (2017)
134
Climate fiction, or “cli-fi,” (Bloom, 2017) is an emerging area of exploration for climate
change communications. Cli-fi is a growing presence in literature, cinema, and gaming and
consists of narratives that examine the causes, effects, and implications of anthropogenic climate
change (Merchant, 2013). Braddock and Horgan describe narratives as “any cohesive and
coherent account of events with an identifiable beginning, middle, and end about characters
engaged in actions that result in questions or conflicts for which answers or resolutions are
provided” (2016, pp. 382–383).
Researchers have begun to address cli-fi’s impact on public attitudes and beliefs about
climate change (Leiserowitz, 2004; Lowe, Brown, Dessai, de Franca, Doria, Haynes, & Vincent,
2006; Svoboda, 2014, 2016). However, so far these approaches have mainly used quantitative
measures to examine audience responses to cli-fi. A numerical approach leaves the possibility
open that significant aspects of the interpretive process are missing from the current literature.
This paper addresses this gap by undertaking a qualitative examination of how audiences
interpret climate fiction using the subject of disaster cli-fi films.
I provide background by briefly describing cli-fi and how it relates to disaster films. I then
discuss narrative persuasion and how narratives have been used to communicate facts. I then
provide an overview of the challenge of communicating science to the public, followed by a
review of the connection between realism and emotion in driving narrative transportation. I then
review the methods and data for the study and discuss the significant impacts of film on audience
emotions, weighing this against the question of realism in film. I suggest that this question of
balance is important for understanding audience responses to climate disaster films as they
inform audience views on climate change.
I use data from focus groups of disaster cli-fi film audiences to qualitatively evaluate their
responses to climate change and climate science in three films: NYC Tornado Terror (2008),
Lightning: Bolts of Destruction (2003), and F6 Twister (also released under the title Christmas
Twister) (2012). Discussions centered on audiences’ emotional responses to the films and their
evaluation of the films’ factual accuracy and were analyzed using grounded theory. My analysis
suggests that films weaken any environmental message present by only discussing climate
change in a cursory way. My analysis also revealed audience skepticism about the speed and
severity of climate disasters depicted in the films and the problem of the lone scientist. I
conclude with a discussion of the potential effects of disaster cli-fi films on environmental
attitudes and suggestions for further research.
Griffin, Audience Reactions to Climate Change, JPIC, Vol. 1 Issue 2 (2017)
135
Background
What is cli-fi?
Cli-fi is a portmanteau of the words climate and fiction coined by Dan Bloom (Bloom, 2017).
Climate change and other environmental problems are increasingly featured in fictional films
(Murray & Heumann, 2009) such as the blockbusters The Day After Tomorrow (2006) and
Snowpiercer (2013) and lower-budget productions such as Category 6 (2004). The cli-fi film
genre is broad and contains films that touch on climate change only briefly (Svoboda, 2016).
Most research on cli-fi films examines better-known productions such as The Day After
Tomorrow (Leiserowitz, 2004; Lowe et al., 2006; Svoboda, 2014) or The Age of Stupid (Howell,
2011). Kaplan explores the broader genre and concludes cli-fi is evidence of environmental pretrauma,
or anxiety about things that will happen in the future (2015). Svoboda examines the
history of cli-fi films and begins the process of classifying these films by the type of disaster they
feature (Svoboda, 2016).
The intersection between disaster films and cli-fi
I focus here on disaster cli-fi films, a type of cli-fi that intersects with the disaster film genre. By
definition, cli-fi narratives discuss climate change, but they do not always depict natural
disasters. Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) implies climate change contributed to the collapse of
ecosystems but does not show this happening in the film itself. Disaster films focus on disasters
as they happen but do not always mention climate change. Twister (1996) is driven by storm
chasers following destructive tornadoes but does not feature climate change. Disaster cli-fi films,
on the other hand, show climate change-driven disasters as they unfold. These films frequently
depict climate change inaccurately—compressing long-term environmental changes into a few
hours, for instance (Murphy, 2014)—but they relate natural disasters to climate change to a
greater or lesser degree.
The persuasiveness of narratives
Communication scholarship suggests narratives can influence attitudes and beliefs of audiences
(Braddock & Dillard, 2016; Mulligan & Habel, 2011, 2013). Facts—including science facts—
presented in narratives may appear more real to audiences than facts not seen in narratives
(Marsh, Butler, & Umanath, 2012). One study showed audiences judged science facts embedded
within a narrative to be more truthful than facts not included in the narrative (Dahlstrom, 2010).
Indeed, inaccurate facts presented in narratives are often remembered by audiences and then
misattributed to reputable sources (Barriga, Shapiro, & Fernandez, 2010; Butler, Zaromb, Lyle,
& Roediger, 2009; Marsh, Meade, & Roediger III, 2003).
Griffin, Audience Reactions to Climate Change, JPIC, Vol. 1 Issue 2 (2017)
136
Barriga et al. (2010) suggest that the tendency for people to believe facts they have read in
narratives occurs because the narrative reminds people of things they believe they heard
previously from credible sources. They write:
It is cognitively taxing for fiction readers to retrieve from memory the original source of
factual information, particularly when it is not central to the understanding of the plot. Thus,
people may remember facts introduced in a story, but do not connect them with the original
source, believing instead that they have “always known” the fact to be true. (Barriga et al.,
2010, p. 6)
These findings are significant for cli-fi scholars because they suggest cli-fi audiences and
readers may absorb inaccurate information about climate change through exposure to these
narratives. This is not to discount a multitude of other factors (such as education and scientific
literacy) that contribute to attitudes, beliefs, and knowledge about climate change, but it does
raise the possibility of cli-fi influencing audiences in ways that we are, as of yet, unaware.
The persuasive power of narrative is related to several interconnected factors, including
transportation. Green and Brock (2000, p. 701) define transportation as being “absorbed in a
story or lost in a narrative world.” When audiences feel transported, they become more open to
incorporating new facts, attitudes, and beliefs presented in the narrative into their own
worldviews (Moyer-Guse, 2008; Shen, Ahern, & Baker, 2014).
In turn, a narrative’s realism can influence how easily audiences are transported into the
world of the story (R. Busselle & Bilandzic, 2008; R. W. Busselle & Bilandzic, 2009; Caputo &
Rouner, 2011; Hall, 2003). Busselle and Bilandzic (2008) suggest most audiences approach
fictional narratives with an understanding that they are consuming something that is not real and
willingly suspend disbelief in order to engage, allowing for transportation. However, when
audiences encounter aspects of the narrative that seem unrealistic, their capacity for disbelief is
challenged and transportation is interrupted (R. W. Busselle & Bilandzic, 2009; Rooney, Benson,
& Hennessy, 2012). Busselle and Bilandzic suggest violations of external realism (by depicting
events that cannot or would not happen in the real world) or internal realism (by depicting events
that go against the internal logic of the narrative world or create plot holes) are especially
disruptive to transportation (2009), thus reducing the narrative’s ability to influence attitudes and
beliefs.
Realism and emotion
Research on realism suggests perceived realism and emotional involvement in films are
positively correlated (Konijn, van der Molen, & van Nes, 2009; Tan, 2008). Audiences
emotionally engage more with narratives that seem real. In turn, this engagement sustains
feelings of realism by encouraging viewers to set aside reservations about aspects of the story
that seem unrealistic.
Emotional engagement can be broken when the narrative violates internal or external realism
(R. Busselle & Bilandzic, 2008; Rooney et al., 2012). Such violations take audiences out of the
world of the narrative by reminding them that the story is “just a film” (Rooney et al., 2012, p.
Griffin, Audience Reactions to Climate Change, JPIC, Vol. 1 Issue 2 (2017)
137
407). In turn, the decreased emotional involvement in the film can then erode perceptions of
realism.
Whether films can evoke emotions in audiences is important because climate change
communications scholarship suggests that the emotional content of media messages can
influence audience reactions (Beattie, Sale, & McGuire, 2011; Smith & Leiserowitz, 2012,
2014). Smith and Leiserowitz (2014), for instance, found that media that evoke hope, interest,
and worry are positively correlated with support for climate change mitigation policies.
Studies also have looked at the effect of cli-fi films on audiences’ level of emotion (Beattie et
al., 2011) and environmental concern (Howell, 2011; Leiserowitz, 2004; Lowe et al., 2006). In
general, these studies find that fictional cli-fi films can elevate emotion levels in audiences. In
turn, this may cause audiences to feel more concern about climate change, which is then linked
with a desire to take action (Beattie et al., 2011). A key question then becomes how audiences
perceive climate change and climate science in disaster cli-fi films. Although such films portray
climate change via emotionally dramatic visual images, they are nonetheless fictional and may
lose audience involvement via unrealistic dramatizations.
Methods
This study uses qualitative methods and focus groups to understand audience perceptions of
realism and fiction in disaster cli-fi films. I draw on established focus group methodology
(Krueger & Casey, 2009; Morgan, 1993, 1996) to center analysis on the question of which
aspects of disaster cli-fi films impact audience perceptions. I used the grounded theory guidelines
laid out by Charmaz for analysis (Charmaz, 2006). These guidelines allow me to explore how
respondents create meaning from the narratives and “minimize[e] preconceived ideas about the
research project and the data” (Charmaz, 2008, p. 155).
Groups ranged from two to five respondents drawn from the student body of a university in
the southeastern United States. I recruited students through a social sciences participant pool run
by the university and participants received research course credit for their participation in the
study. My research assistant and I determined that we had reached saturation after six focus
group sessions. Specifically, we reviewed the notes and transcripts collected during each focus
group session and compared them to the notes and transcripts from previous sessions to establish
whether any new themes had arisen. We halted the focus groups after we concluded that they
were no longer producing new themes.
During each session, participants watched one of three disaster cli-fi films: NYC: Tornado
Terror (2008), F6 Twister (Christmas Twister) (2012), or Lightning: Bolts of Destruction (2003).
Four groups viewed NYC: Tornado Terror to standardize responses between groups, and I
continued using this film until I reached saturation. Because disaster cli-fi films vary
considerably in terms of their realism, I held two additional focus groups in which students were
shown either F6 Twister (Christmas Twister) or Lightning: Bolts of Destruction to ensure that
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responses were not limited to NYC: Tornado Terror. Although the groups viewed a total of three
films, the themes that emerged from the F6 Twister (Christmas Twister) and Lightning: Bolts of
Destruction sessions were overwhelmingly similar to those from the NYC: Tornado Terror
groups, suggesting that audiences viewing different low-budget disaster cli-fi films generally
respond to them similarly.
I asked participants a series of open-ended questions to elicit their reactions to the films.
Questions progressed from general to specific. I first asked participants to note specific scenes or
moments within the film that impacted them and how they reacted to the films’ various
characters. I then asked participants whether the film had a message. Some groups immediately
brought up environmental themes, but I took care not to lead them to environmental messages. I
followed this with questions about the film’s realism and its depiction of science. Finally, I asked
participants whether they believed the film had impacted their own environmental attitudes and
beliefs and whether it could affect other people’s environmental attitudes and beliefs.
I analyzed the focus group results using grounded theory, beginning with transcribing the
audio files and coding the transcripts as per Charmaz (2006). I coded the transcripts for mentions
of climate change or global warming. The films tended to use “global warming” over “climate
change” and most participants echoed this. I also coded for content related to science and the
scientists in the films, as well as for statements about specific natural disasters featured in the
films. I paid particular attention to statements that conveyed skepticism, uncertainty, as well as
outright disbelief. Through analyzing the combinations of particular themes within the films as
well as attitudes expressed by the participants towards these themes, I drew several conclusions
as to how elements of disaster cli-fi films impact participants.
Results
Themes of climate change and the environment
Almost all participants cited action scenes featuring natural disasters in response to questions
about what images or moments stood out to them. In particular, they cited outlandish and
scientifically inaccurate scenes. The NYC Tornado Terror groups, for instance, frequently cited a
scene in which a ball of lightning electrocutes an office worker as she is sheltering from the
storm.
PARTICIPANT 16: [T]hat really big one [ball of lightning] that went inside the building.
PARTICIPANT 2: Probably remember the scene with the electrical ball coming into the
building.
Another commonly mentioned moment involved New York City skyscrapers illuminated by
St. Elmo’s fire. St. Elmo’s fire is a real phenomenon but was inaccurately depicted as a luminous
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green substance coating the outside of buildings. The office workers use rubberized mats to
make their way down the stairwell, escaping the electrified structure.
INTERVIEWER: So, are there particular scenes…that stood out to you?
PARTICIPANT 11: Probably the stairwell with the electricity going up.
PARTICIPANT 17: The electricity throughout the film, in the stairwell and on the buildings.
You could just see the electricity [on the side of the building].
Participants were divided on the central theme of the films. Some participants saw themes of
persistence and being appreciative of what you have in life. They spoke about the persistence of
Cassie, the scientist protagonist of NYC Tornado Terror and her husband, Jim, the deputy mayor
of New York City.
PARTICIPANT 6: I guess, I mean generally, at least Cassie demonstrated persistence in the
matter. Sticking to her ultimate plan, and being persistent and so devoted
to some form of goal. And don’t give up.
PARTICIPANT 12: The one guy at the end…he made it sound like the message was appreciate
what you have.
PARTICIPANT 24: Believe in yourself.
Other participants saw climate change as a predominant theme.
PARTICIPANT 1: I think a lot of it is a message about global warming. I generally agree
with that.
PARTICIPANT 12: They’re saying that global warming is changing the environment in ways
that we can’t understand yet.
PARTICIPANT 22: It was pretty politically charged, with the whole idea of global warming
and its causing all these rapid movements is a big, I don’t know when this
movie was made, but still a pretty big politically charged film.
Several participants had reservations about climate change as the narrative’s main theme,
noting that it was only loosely tied into the overall plot.
INTERVIEWER: You mentioned global warming. Is that a major theme in this, would you
say?
PARTICIPANT 12: Yeah, they did mention it, but I feel like they would have talked more
about it if that was the main cause.
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Participants who also expressed skepticism about anthropogenic climate change had a strong
reaction to the narrative’s climate elements. Participant 22, for instance, called F6 Twister
(Christmas Twister) “politically charged” and argued that the film was highly inaccurate. He
cited Logan, a climate-skeptic meteorologist and one of the film’s main antagonists, as having
the most appropriate view of climate change.
PARTICIPANT 22: I think Logan was the only one who was right in saying that things happen
and [there is] a constant stage of change.
Likewise, Participant 20 eagerly identified climate change as a theme of the film NYC
Tornado Terror and described it as “propaganda.” He compared it to the episode “ManBearPig”
(Parker, 2006) from the television show South Park.
PARTICIPANT 20: I just saw it as a giant environmentalist propaganda type. Way out of the
scope. There's laser lightning beams falling from the apartment...They're
[the climate scientists] always right and the government never listens to us
and they don't care about anything. I just thought it was so out of the scope
that I couldn't really get into the characters. I just kind of was upset with
the writers and the way they, it was so overboard. I honestly thought [of]
South Park, "ManBearPig."
Here, the participant argues that NYC Tornado Terror is similar to Gore’s film An
Inconvenient Truth (2006), which attempted to warn people about global warming but was
decried by climate change deniers as alarmist. The “ManBearPig” episode of South Park shows
Gore causing destruction in his wild attempts to warn people about the fictional ManBearPig,
before announcing that he is producing a new film starring himself.
Participants who were concerned about climate change also identified environmental themes
but tended to be less emphatic that climate change was a central message, suggesting that climate
skeptics are more likely to pick up on climate change themes in pop culture than people who
support the consensus. Climate skeptics may see such media representations of climate change as
threatening their worldview (Kahan, 2012; Kahan, Jenkins-Smith, & Braman, 2011), shaping
their opinions about the narrative in question.
Relationship between climate change and disasters in film
Participants overwhelmingly questioned the connection between climate change and natural
disasters as depicted by the films. Many accepted the link between climate change and extreme
weather, but (justifiably) felt that the films did not accurately portray the link. Participants noted
that the films contained only a cursory discussion of climate change and failed to connect it with
disasters in a meaningful way. This lack of a connection with climate change was a major factor
in participants’ reluctance to identify climate change as a major theme.
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PARTICIPANT 2: One of the things that stood out to me was…they never gave much of an
explanation as to what was going on. The news kept saying that it was a
side effect of global warming.
PARTICIPANT 11: I mean, they mention it [climate change], but to me it doesn’t seem related
because when I think of global warming, I think “Holy crap, everyone’s
going to die.”
Some participants speculated that climate change was simply a way to advance the plot.
PARTICIPANT 14: It’s just something to blame for this. We don’t really understand it, but
let’s say it’s global warming…They had a good story, but they needed
something in the background [that was] scientific. Sort of reminded me of
“The Day After Tomorrow.”
One participant remarked that the film’s treatment of climate change was so irrelevant to the rest
of the plot that she had forgotten it by the film’s ending.
PARTICIPANT 23: Well, it’s something she mentioned, but it’s not throughout the movie and
it’s being reintroduced to you and it’s being explained to you. It’s just
briefly mentioned…and [I] totally even forgot by the end of it that they
mentioned global warming because it was just in passing.
Environmental messages that may be present in disaster cli-fi films such as this are thus diluted
by the ambiguous relationship between disasters and climate change and the lack of a concrete
mechanism linking the two.
Speed and severity of disasters
Participants expressed skepticism as to whether the natural disasters depicted could unfold with
the speed and severity depicted in the films. Several participants noted the extreme nature of the
disasters made the film seem less realistic and credible.
PARTICIPANT 21: [I]t loses all credibility with just the magnitude of how frequent these
tornadoes are…The chance of this happening is extremely low, so it loses
all its credibility when you’re pushing it to that extent.
One participant suggested the extreme and unusual disasters may lead to audiences’ dismissing
not only the film itself, but climate science as sensationalized.
PARTICIPANT 1: Well, global warming causes more extreme weather and…hurricanes or
tornadoes and things like that. I don’t think you got anything this extreme
where a tornado shoots lightning. So, people who watch would be, “Oh,
that’s not real global warming, that’s exaggerated.”
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Others felt that the disasters’ rapid speed damaged the films’ realism.
PARTICIPANT 5: I feel like it happened too fast.
PARTICIPANT 12: [W]ith the science…let’s not forget that this all happened in the span of a
day.
PARTICIPANT 17: It was really drastic. “Oh, nice day,” and then the tornadoes show up and
then the storm would go about it and then it turned into completely gray
sky. It really cannot happen that fast, I'm pretty sure that it doesn't happen
in 3 minutes.
The disasters’ rapid speed added to the lack of scientific context to make the film less impactful
for one participant:
PARTICIPANT 18: I just didn't like the fact that they were…I think they [the main characters]
were at a party or something like that, and these things [the tornadoes] just
come up out of nowhere. So, can you at least tell us what led to it over the
years? To me they should have done something to lead up to that…It
scares me for a second and then it's just, “Can this possibly happen?”
Exaggerating the speed and severity of natural disasters associated with climate change appears
to damage external realism for audiences, potentially making the films less likely to impact their
attitudes and beliefs.
Representation of science in disaster cli-fi films
The depiction of science was a significant source of skepticism and uncertainty for participants.
Many participants found the science and underlying concepts unrealistic. When asked how
accurate the film’s science was, some participants outright rejected it:
PARTICIPANT 21: Literally zero. There’s nothing behind it.
PARTICIPANT 19: I think the majority of the stuff we saw in the film was really unrealistic.
Similar to Lowe et al.’s results (Lowe et al., 2006), some participants expressed uncertainty
as to the boundary between factual science and film science. Despite criticizing the films for lack
of scientific realism, comments made by several participants reveal a degree of uncertainty
regarding science fact vs. fiction. Many participants admitted they were unsure whether the
phenomena depicted—such as St. Elmo’s fire and cloud seeding—were possible. They expressed
surprise when other participants pointed out that these were not entirely fictionalized concepts,
expressing tentative acceptance of the fictionalized science.
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PARTICIPANT 11: I thought it was pretty cool, the idea that, with the mini tornadoes, it’s kind
of cool. I didn’t know that they get cold on the inside, though.
PARTICIPANT 14: I don’t know too much about extreme weather, so, I mean to me just the
idea that something like that could potentially happen is really crazy.
PARTICIPANT 1: [I]t’s something that could happen, hypothetically.
PARTICIPANT 3: I’m not an expert but I think anything’s possible.
Other participants were more ambivalent:
PARTICIPANT 2: Could be possible. One of the things that stood out to me was that…they
never gave much of an explanation as to what was going on. The news
kept saying that it was a side effect of global warming.
PARTICIPANT 8: I was thinking about the high-low atmosphere splitting and things like
that. I don’t know if that’s a thing, but that just sounds more
believable.…So there were certain aspects of it, you know, that I feel were
possible.
PARTICIPANT 23: I feel like lightning can definitely kill people and if it’s powerful enough,
can cause a fire or whatever, but I don’t know. Maybe small parts of it
were realistic, but most of it wasn’t.
PARTICIPANT 25: It’s just the concept in general that was interesting, that one massive storm
could overtake…I wasn’t sure. It didn’t seem really real. I don’t know in
terms of the scientific part of it, to determine if it’s actually feasible.
Several participants explained they were unqualified to judge the films’ accuracy without
further research.
PARTICIPANT 11: I don’t have anything to compare it to yet [in terms of accuracy]. I haven’t
researched it.
PARTICIPANT 18: I don't know if something like this could be a possibility. I would have to
do research on it to speak on it, but it's definitely scary if it can happen. So
[it] definitely scares people.
Many participants said the film disasters were too outlandish and vague to look up on their
own, but others expressed curiosity. In line with Hart and Leiserowitz’s findings on informationseeking
among The Day After Tomorrow audiences (Hart & Leiserowitz, 2009), participants
expressed interest in learning more about the disasters in the film. I asked participants what, if
anything, they would look up after the discussion.
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PARTICIPANT 12: How much of that [the tornadoes in the film] is actually true.
PARTICIPANT 15: Are there any tornados [such as those shown] that actually happened?
Participants also critiqued the films’ representation of science, particularly the lone scientist
trope. The mysterious disasters in all three films are eventually understood and/or destroyed by a
single scientist character who races the clock with his/her research. Participants correctly argue
that science is frequently a collaborative enterprise, making it unlikely that a lone scientist could
successfully solve such a complex problem on his/her own.
PARTICIPANT 4: I think there would be a lot more people involved, a lot more.
PARTICIPANT 16: She was the only one who came up with something. I guess she was the
head and she was the smartest one…But I mean, I was wondering, “What
were those people [the rest of the scientific staff] doing?”
Likewise, participants criticized the speed with which the lead scientist identified the
problem and developed a solution. These critiques were often related to participants’ perceptions
that the disaster evolved too quickly:
PARTICIPANT 11: Science does not take a day.
PARTICIPANT 12: [T]here would be a lot more testing and stuff going on, especially if it is
some kind of disaster…But they were so sure – at least she was – so sure
that this is exactly the perfect solution, and you don’t get that sort of
certainty in that short of time.
PARTICIPANT 11: And remember two hours before [revealing the solution to the tornado
outbreak] she [the lead scientist] was like, “This will take years.” Two
seconds later – done. No.
Efficacy and disaster cli-fi films
One important criticism participants had of the film was that it did not contain any suggestions as
to how to combat anthropogenic climate change in the real world. Participants felt the
environmental message of the film was weakened by telling them a story about the dangers of
climate change but failing to provide any suggestions for concrete actions audience members
could take in their own lives to mitigate the threat.
PARTICIPANT 5: I think this film in particular didn’t really address that [taking action to
minimize the threat] because they didn’t give an explanation for why it
was out there. They just jumped right in there. There wasn’t, “Oh there’s
so much greenhouse gas,” or “Oh you’re using too much fossil fuels.”
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PARTICIPANT 14: [T]hey didn’t really go deeper in terms of this is why it’s global warming
specifically…And [there was] no message about, “We need to fix what
we’re doing or something.” They’re just, “Oh let’s stop this, what’s going
on now.”
PARTICIPANT 8: I feel like it doesn’t say any of the techniques [to stop climate change] – if
someone was to, you know, think it was their fault.
This criticism is in line with other studies in the social sciences that argue the lack of concrete
suggestions for how to combat climate change weakens environmental messages (Hart &
Feldman, 2014; Li, 2014).
Impacts on environmental attitudes
The consensus was that these films are not particularly effective at changing environmental
attitudes, particularly in light of the criticisms regarding lack of efficacy. Although some
participants suggested that less educated, less informed members of the public would be more
likely to take the films at face value, participants generally felt that the films were too inaccurate
to impact attitudes. Some participants even went as far as to say films such as the ones used in
the study made people less likely to accept anthropogenic climate change as a real threat for
which action is required.
PARTICIPANT 2: I think if people would see this movie they would kind of think that global
warming is not real because of the movie.
PARTICIPANT 13: I mean from this [film], they probably think of it as a joke.
That being said, participants did not outright reject the idea that fictional films could have
indirect impacts on attitudes. Even though viewers might dismiss the films as unrealistic, a
lingering uncertainty could remain, as some participants noted:
PARTICIPANT 4: I think that people might not believe it, but then still have the doubt that it
could happen.
PARTICIPANT 2: I think in the back of their mind.
Because participants had difficulty distinguishing where fact and fiction diverged, the
possibility of extreme disasters seemed to remain for some participants.
PARTICIPANT 18: [O]f course you're going to have people that say, “Oh Syfy, just another
one of those movies.” Then you have some people that at first hand, will
get kind of scared, because they're like, “Well, I don't know much about
science,” like myself, and they'll think, “Well, maybe this possibly can
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happen, even though it's a movie.” But for a while people might think,
“Maybe this can happen.”
Discussion
Several conclusions can be drawn from these results. Participants generally noticed recurring
mentions of climate change but were divided on whether these constituted a major theme. Much
of this hesitancy came from the lack of a detailed, specific discussion of climate change within
the films. Interestingly, the few participants with a skeptical attitude toward anthropogenic
climate change tended to be most adamant that climate change was a theme. It may be that such
participants were not sufficiently transported into the world of the narrative to preclude back
arguing against the films’ premises. It may also be that participants who have strong feelings of
climate skepticism may have picked up on climate change references early on because they
perceived such references as an effort to challenge their deeply-held beliefs.
The predominant emotional responses to the films were incredulity and confusion.
Underneath this umbrella of skepticism were three specific areas of disbelief: the causal
relationship between climate change and disasters (violation of internal realism), the swiftness
and severity of the portrayed disasters (violation of external realism), and the representation of
science (violation of external realism).
Despite their generally skeptical attitude toward the depiction of science and climate change
in the films, participants remained uncertain about the barrier between science fact and science
fiction. Even though participants openly expressed disbelief that the events in the film could
happen, many seemed unsure as to the degree to which the films exaggerated and invented
phenomena. This uncertainty suggests participants struggled to pinpoint the specific point at
which the films departed from established science, similar to the results found by Lowe et al.
(2006).
It appears the violations of internal and external realism documented impacted audience
involvement in the films, as predicted by the literature. The combination of extreme,
scientifically-questionable events and weak causation in disaster cli-fi films caused audiences to
lose track of the climate change theme. In addition, participants questioned the sped-up timelines
and exaggerated intensity of the disasters in the films. Unrealistic timelines and impossible
impacts from climate change are common criticisms of disaster cli-fi films levied by both
filmgoers and scientists alike (Leiserowitz, 2004; Lowe et al., 2006). Participants felt the use of a
lone scientist trope, where a single individual diagnoses and solves the disaster on his/her own,
was inaccurate. They suggested these features made the film less realistic and weakened their
engagement with the storyline. This is in line with other research which suggests that films must
maintain a certain level of believability to ensure that audiences remain engaged (Lowe et al.,
2006).
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Overall, participants doubted the films’ ability to affect environmental attitudes and beliefs.
They argued the films were too inaccurate and lacking in credibility to influence how the public
thinks about climate change. These findings contradict other research on environmental attitudes
and fictional films. Although the participants dismissed the influence of these particular films on
environmental attitudes, studies have shown that The Day After Tomorrow (2004) did affect
audiences’ attitudes toward climate change (Howell, 2011; Leiserowitz, 2004; Lowe et al.,
2006).
There are a few possible explanations for the disconnect between what participants say
about the impacts of film on environmental attitudes and what researchers have measured. The
third-person effect is a well-documented phenomenon within communications studies (Davison,
1983) which “predicts that individuals will perceive media messages to have greater effects on
other people than on themselves” (Salwen & Dupagne, 1999, p. 523). The third-person effect is
thought to arise because people generally believe they are smarter than others; thus, they are less
likely to be persuaded by the media than others who are less intelligent (Paul, Salwen, &
Dupagne, 2000). Given the participants’ observation that the natural disasters depicted in disaster
cli-fi films are highly unscientific and exaggerated, it could be that participants assumed that no
one was gullible enough to be influenced by them. Theoretically, this would suggest a sort of
floor to the third-person effect whereby some forms of media are seen as so obviously absurd
that no one could be influenced by them—even the assumed less-intelligent third-person.
I suggest that what is more likely is that participants were more influenced by the films than
they openly acknowledged. Indeed, given the uncertainty expressed by many participants as to
where scientific fact stopped and science fiction began, the films may have impacted participant
environmental attitudes without their explicit awareness. This impact would support the findings
of Lowe et al. (2006) and Leiserowitz (2004), as well as the concerns that audiences will mistake
fictional science for science facts (Kirby, 2003b, 2003a). Studies that suggest people struggle to
separate fact from fiction when watching science fiction films (Barriga et al., 2010) and
historical fiction films (Butler et al., 2009; Marsh et al., 2012, 2003) add to this fear.
Thus, it is worth considering the possibility that, although fictional films are unlikely to
sway climate deniers and unlikely to shake supporters of the consensus, subtler environmental
beliefs and scientific understandings of issues like climate change could be affected. These
misunderstandings have implications for climate change communicators and advocates, who
may find themselves spending more time debunking misperceptions. Although more research is
needed, it is possible that the inaccurate science in these films can contribute to a general lack of
understanding of what causes climate change, how humans are contributing, and why climate
change is a threat.
Equally concerning is the possibility that film audiences, having been exposed to inaccurate
ideas about climate change and storms in disaster cli-fi, may be more susceptible to
misinformation in the event of actual storms. During the preparations for Hurricane Irma in
September 2017, for example, an image of a fake news ticker with the caption “Irma Now
Contains Sharks” went viral on social media (Porter, 2017). Irma was the subject of a variety of
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hoaxes, including the rumor that it would make landfall in Florida as a Category 6 storm
(hurricanes are measured on the Saffir-Simpson scale, which goes up to 5) (Ohlheiser, 2017). It
may be that people who saw these films misremembered the inaccurate, fictional storm
information later, making them more receptive to misleading claims during an actual extreme
weather event. More research is needed to determine to what extent, if any, inaccurate
information in cli-fi influences perceptions of real disasters. However, as was evident during
Irma, debunking such misinformation falls on the shoulders of meteorologists and other public
safety officials whose time would be better spent warning of actual dangers.
Limitations and directions for future research
Using undergraduate students for focus groups poses certain limitations, as these students are not
representative of movie audiences in the United States or elsewhere. It is also possible younger
media consumers have different levels of scientific education and understanding than older
media consumers, impacting what they see as realistic or unrealistic. Further studies should
explore how a wider audience interacts with disaster cli-fi films to see whether these results hold
true for other demographics.
Audiences exposed to historical fiction films often incorrectly interpret historical
fabrications as fact (Butler et al., 2009; Marsh et al., 2012, 2003). Whether such
misinterpretations occur with disaster cli-fi films as well is an area of study that would be quite
fruitful and important. Specifically, if audiences are absorbing misleading or false information
about climate change from popular culture, science communicators may be forced to devote
increasing amounts of time and energy to debunking false notions propagated in fiction.
Other studies exploring the influence of film on environmental attitudes have suggested
films can affect attitudes and beliefs about climate change (Howell, 2011; Leiserowitz, 2004;
Lowe et al., 2006). These studies also suggest fictional representations of climate change in film
can influence audiences’ intended actions on climate change. Because of the limited scope of
this study, it is not possible to say whether the low-budget disaster cli-fi films such as the ones
examined here have similar effects on audience actions. Given the proliferation of these films in
the media marketplace, it would be useful for science communicators to understand how these
films impact their audiences’ willingness to act on climate change.
Although it has been over a decade since the theatrical release of The Day After Tomorrow
(2004), new examples of climate change in popular culture are multiplying rapidly. The
Sharknado series—which specifically invokes climate change—has become a cult classic, with
five films total in the series as well as books, documentaries, and a plethora of merchandise. Clifi
is rapidly becoming an important genre in film and other media. Social scientists who wish to
study public attitudes on climate change will increasingly need to engage with pop culture. My
findings suggest the relationship between pop culture and attitudes is complex but specific
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components of film and fiction may be more important than others in determining audience
reactions.
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