Abstract

An Inconvenient Truth has inspired a wave of public concern about global warming. The film's environmental rhetoric invokes a millennial apocalypticism inherited from canonical works like Silent Spring. However, Truth moderates its apocalyptic tendencies with scientific rationalism and constructions of audience agency. In so doing, Truth offers a tempered apocalypticism that embraces the affect of a more fiery tradition while maintaining an authoritative voice, thereby appealing to a broader audience. Truth makes clear that there can be no singular environmental rhetoric, but a mixture of rhetorics that mirrors the contentious climate of environmental politics.

Journal
Rhetoric Review
Published
2009-01-02
DOI
10.1080/07350190802540708
CompPile
Search in CompPile ↗
Open Access
Closed
Topics
Export

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (3)

  1. Journal of Technical Writing and Communication
  2. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  3. Rhetoric Review

References (11) · 1 in this index

  1. 10.2307/377264
  2. The Die Is Cast: Topical and Ontological Dimensions of the Locus of the Irreparable
    The Quarterly Journal of Speech  
  3. Toward a Civil Discourse
  4. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
  5. Green Culture: Environmental Rhetoric in Contemporary America
Show all 11 →
  1. Introduction
  2. An Inconvenient Truth: A Global Warning
  3. Killingsworth , M. Jimmie and Palmer , Jacqueline S. “Millennial Ecology: The Apocalyptic Narrative from Sile…
    “Millennial Ecology: The Apocalyptic Narrative from Silent Spring to Global Warming.”
  4. Break Through: From the Death of Environmentalism to the Politics of Possibility
  5. 10.2307/358292
  6. The Apocalyptic Vision in America