What is it about?

We use a sample of mission statements and donation appeals by six prominent environmental charities from the UK. We identify textual strategies that position the prospective donor as a “beneficiary” of environment-oriented actions. We also analyze rhetorical strategies and visual resources that are to emotionally touch the prospective donors.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

This study follows the assumption that social trust is more important to donations than accountability and shows how, despite its incomplete and selective representation of actions and decisions, a sufficiently prominent environmental organization can be regarded as legitimate. The rhetorical construction of legitimacy is taken as a key feature of charity communication with rationalizations (logos), moral evaluation and expert authorization (ethos), as well as prolific emotional appeals (pathos). This division corresponds to a choice of textual patterns: ways of representing actors (institutions and donors), processes (of helping save, care and educate) and attributes (trust, efficacy, global/local reach). In visual online appeals, the aestheticized photos additionally help with the identification with the causes championed by charities. legitimization and identification techniques have been illustrated with examples of devices strategically applied for the uptake of social trust.

Perspectives

The tension between economic growth that leads to a depletion of resources and the need to limit environmental degradation is mitigated through discourses of sustainability. This analysis points to ways in which the discourse of sustainability enables an a win-win conservation. Legitimization and identification techniques are strategically applied for the uptake of social trust.

Dr hab. Katarzyna Molek-Kozakowska
University of Opole

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: “Nature needs you”: discursive constructions of legitimacy and identification in environmental charity appeals, Text & Talk - An Interdisciplinary Journal of Language Discourse Communication Studies, January 2022, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1515/text-2020-0075.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page