Tinkering with nature: discourses of ‘nature’ in media coverage of genetics and biotechnology

Concepts of nature and the ‘natural’ order of things form a central anchor in public understanding, public debate and controversy about developments in genetic research and in human, animal and plant biotechnology. ‘Nature’, as Raymond Williams observed, ‘is perhaps the most complex word in the lang...

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Main Author: Anders Hansen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centro de Estudos de Comunicação e Sociedade (CECS) 2012-12-01
Series:Comunicação e Sociedade
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistacomsoc.pt/article/view/1019
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spelling doaj-157c59bc51a44c17b52f71059a2a697d2020-11-25T03:21:30ZengCentro de Estudos de Comunicação e Sociedade (CECS)Comunicação e Sociedade1645-20892183-35752012-12-016517410.17231/comsoc.6(2004).12281019Tinkering with nature: discourses of ‘nature’ in media coverage of genetics and biotechnologyAnders Hansen0University of LeicesterConcepts of nature and the ‘natural’ order of things form a central anchor in public understanding, public debate and controversy about developments in genetic research and in human, animal and plant biotechnology. ‘Nature’, as Raymond Williams observed, ‘is perhaps the most complex word in the language’ and it is precisely from this complexity that its discursive and ideological power is derived. While it is widely accepted that ‘nature’ is a social construct, it is perhaps the chief appearance of not being so, that makes it such a powerful ideological anchor: ‘nature’ in discourse is used to appeal to what is ontological, God-given, the proper order of things, untainted by man, primordial.This article examines the centrality of concepts of nature in public arena controversies about advances in genetic research and biotechnology. The aim is to show how nature is used or invoked to legitimate particular positions in public debate about genetic research and applications. The article explores the uses of nature in British newspaper coverage of genetics and biotechnology, and it examines changes between 1986/87 and 2002/2003.https://revistacomsoc.pt/article/view/1019Discoursenaturegeneticsbiotechnologymedia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anders Hansen
spellingShingle Anders Hansen
Tinkering with nature: discourses of ‘nature’ in media coverage of genetics and biotechnology
Comunicação e Sociedade
Discourse
nature
genetics
biotechnology
media
author_facet Anders Hansen
author_sort Anders Hansen
title Tinkering with nature: discourses of ‘nature’ in media coverage of genetics and biotechnology
title_short Tinkering with nature: discourses of ‘nature’ in media coverage of genetics and biotechnology
title_full Tinkering with nature: discourses of ‘nature’ in media coverage of genetics and biotechnology
title_fullStr Tinkering with nature: discourses of ‘nature’ in media coverage of genetics and biotechnology
title_full_unstemmed Tinkering with nature: discourses of ‘nature’ in media coverage of genetics and biotechnology
title_sort tinkering with nature: discourses of ‘nature’ in media coverage of genetics and biotechnology
publisher Centro de Estudos de Comunicação e Sociedade (CECS)
series Comunicação e Sociedade
issn 1645-2089
2183-3575
publishDate 2012-12-01
description Concepts of nature and the ‘natural’ order of things form a central anchor in public understanding, public debate and controversy about developments in genetic research and in human, animal and plant biotechnology. ‘Nature’, as Raymond Williams observed, ‘is perhaps the most complex word in the language’ and it is precisely from this complexity that its discursive and ideological power is derived. While it is widely accepted that ‘nature’ is a social construct, it is perhaps the chief appearance of not being so, that makes it such a powerful ideological anchor: ‘nature’ in discourse is used to appeal to what is ontological, God-given, the proper order of things, untainted by man, primordial.This article examines the centrality of concepts of nature in public arena controversies about advances in genetic research and biotechnology. The aim is to show how nature is used or invoked to legitimate particular positions in public debate about genetic research and applications. The article explores the uses of nature in British newspaper coverage of genetics and biotechnology, and it examines changes between 1986/87 and 2002/2003.
topic Discourse
nature
genetics
biotechnology
media
url https://revistacomsoc.pt/article/view/1019
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