Engaging truthiness and obfuscation in a political ecology analysis of a protest against the Pengzhou Petroleum Refinery

This article draws from an empirical case study of the use of truthiness and obfuscation during an environmental protest in China, to help highlight the complex issues that political ecology faces in the Post-Truth Era. By drawing on empirical data from social media and local interviews, this articl...

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Main Authors: Edwin Schmitt, Hongtao Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2019-11-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23118
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spelling doaj-fd774e30eec74ddd99e578f70187b1042020-11-25T00:28:39ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512019-11-0126157959810.2458/v26i1.2311822683Engaging truthiness and obfuscation in a political ecology analysis of a protest against the Pengzhou Petroleum RefineryEdwin Schmitt0Hongtao Li1University of OsloZhejiang UniversityThis article draws from an empirical case study of the use of truthiness and obfuscation during an environmental protest in China, to help highlight the complex issues that political ecology faces in the Post-Truth Era. By drawing on empirical data from social media and local interviews, this article documents rising social tensions associated with air pollution and the recent construction of a petroleum refinery outside of Chengdu. The article notes how historical precedent and the obfuscating of environmental information by government officials provided the conditions that led to residents presenting a selection of facts or even false information to support truth-claims that in turn supported their protest against the refinery. While this tactic of using truthiness to support an environmental protest may have sent the relevant information viral across the internet, the article also documents how the Chinese state in the end was able to de-legitimize the protestors by labeling their behavior as "anti-science." The article draws on this case study to encourage political ecologists to critically evaluate and contextualize the limits of utilizing alternative facts to challenge authoritarian control over the environment. Key words: Post-Truth, environmental protest, social media, China, environmentality, necropoliticshttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23118
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Edwin Schmitt
Hongtao Li
spellingShingle Edwin Schmitt
Hongtao Li
Engaging truthiness and obfuscation in a political ecology analysis of a protest against the Pengzhou Petroleum Refinery
Journal of Political Ecology
author_facet Edwin Schmitt
Hongtao Li
author_sort Edwin Schmitt
title Engaging truthiness and obfuscation in a political ecology analysis of a protest against the Pengzhou Petroleum Refinery
title_short Engaging truthiness and obfuscation in a political ecology analysis of a protest against the Pengzhou Petroleum Refinery
title_full Engaging truthiness and obfuscation in a political ecology analysis of a protest against the Pengzhou Petroleum Refinery
title_fullStr Engaging truthiness and obfuscation in a political ecology analysis of a protest against the Pengzhou Petroleum Refinery
title_full_unstemmed Engaging truthiness and obfuscation in a political ecology analysis of a protest against the Pengzhou Petroleum Refinery
title_sort engaging truthiness and obfuscation in a political ecology analysis of a protest against the pengzhou petroleum refinery
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
series Journal of Political Ecology
issn 1073-0451
publishDate 2019-11-01
description This article draws from an empirical case study of the use of truthiness and obfuscation during an environmental protest in China, to help highlight the complex issues that political ecology faces in the Post-Truth Era. By drawing on empirical data from social media and local interviews, this article documents rising social tensions associated with air pollution and the recent construction of a petroleum refinery outside of Chengdu. The article notes how historical precedent and the obfuscating of environmental information by government officials provided the conditions that led to residents presenting a selection of facts or even false information to support truth-claims that in turn supported their protest against the refinery. While this tactic of using truthiness to support an environmental protest may have sent the relevant information viral across the internet, the article also documents how the Chinese state in the end was able to de-legitimize the protestors by labeling their behavior as "anti-science." The article draws on this case study to encourage political ecologists to critically evaluate and contextualize the limits of utilizing alternative facts to challenge authoritarian control over the environment. Key words: Post-Truth, environmental protest, social media, China, environmentality, necropolitics
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23118
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