1. Irish energy landscapes on film
- Author
-
Danielle Barrios-O’Neill and Pat Brereton
- Subjects
Energy (psychological) ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Irish ,Natural resource economics ,020209 energy ,Political science ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,language ,02 engineering and technology ,General Medicine ,01 natural sciences ,language.human_language ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Landscape, and its relation to place identity, is a powerful tool for visualizing and making legible the effects of environmental change. So often the operations of resource consumption and conservation occur in a way that shapes and changes particular regional landscapes. This is significant in an era where inspiring audiences and policy-makers to respond to unsustainable resource use and environmental change is difficult, but where we are still compelled to care for particular elements of place as they relate to identity. In this article we examine how resource use and landscape change are communicated through Irish films, where the interactions of place identity and landscape are central. A key through line argument is how landscape is an important vehicle for expressing anxieties and contexts for resource interdependency; another is how elements of local and regional identity compete and interact with global concerns, such as climate change or globalization, in complex ways. We analyse these interactions to demonstrate how energy resource use and environmental change are linked, highlighting ‘small nation’ tensions concerning geographic identity and resource ownership that are relevant to real-world energy transitions and apply much more broadly.
- Published
- 2021
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