Abstract

Abstract Ecolinguistics studies the interactions between language and ecology. It investigates whether the stories created by language are destructive or beneficial to all the constituents of the environment. In search of positive stories for our environment, this article focuses on vegan campaigns which generally bring awareness about veganism that, in turn, advocates protection of nonhuman animals and abstention from their exploitation. Nonhuman animals are part of the ecosystem and the way they are portrayed in language may determine the relationship between human and nonhuman animals. As vegan campaigns refer to nonhuman animals as sentient living beings, it is important to analyze whether the language and image of these campaigns articulate their purposes and create beneficial stories for nonhuman species. This article explores the stories regarding nonhuman animals in 27 posters of the vegan campaign “Go Vegan World” and examines how these stories are shaped and whether they are aligned with vegan values. The study is approached from an ecolinguistic perspective with a focus on multimodality where the language was analyzed through van Leeuwen’s Social Actor and Social Action theory, and the image was analyzed with Kress and van Leeuwen’s Grammar of Visual Design. Further, the analysis involves the ecosophy defined as a personal ecological philosophy of relationships between human and nonhuman animals, plants, and the physical environment. The findings suggest that the campaign language and image shape three stories: salience where nonhuman animals are individuals with their own feelings and lives; conviction that nonhuman animals matter as much as humans; ideology where biocentrism is promoted. By comparing these stories with the article’s ecosophy, an ecolinguistic analysis showed that they are largely beneficial in representing nonhuman animals as sentient living beings who are equal to humans.

Highlights

  • This article aims to demonstrate the importance of both language and image in shaping stories about who nonhuman animals are, and analyze how the language and image of vegan campaigns create stories (Stibbe 2015), that is, cognitive structures that exist in the mind of people and eventually influence how they think, talk, or act

  • The study is approached from an ecolinguistic perspective with a focus on multimodality where the language was analyzed through van Leeuwen’s Social Actor and Social Action theory, and the image was analyzed with Kress and van Leeuwen’s Grammar of Visual Design

  • This study examines 27 posters from the “Go Vegan World” campaign, and uses ecolinguistics to study the use of language and images to represent nonhuman animals in these posters

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Summary

Introduction

This article aims to demonstrate the importance of both language and image in shaping stories about who nonhuman animals (species other than humans) are, and analyze how the language and image of vegan campaigns create stories (Stibbe 2015), that is, cognitive structures that exist in the mind of people and eventually influence how they think, talk, or act These stories are further identified from an ecolinguistic perspective as either beneficial or destructive with regard to nonhuman animals, beneficial or destructive to the environment and the natural world.

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