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Remembering the Past,Anticipating the Future: Community Learning and Adaptation Discourse in Media Commemorations of Catastrophic Wildfires in Colorado
Authors:Adrianne Kroepsch  Elizabeth A. Koebele  Deserai A. Crow  John Berggren  Juhi Huda  Lydia A. Lawhon
Affiliation:1. Division of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, USA;2. Department of Political Science, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, USA;3. School of Public Affairs, University of Colorado-Denver, Denver, CO, USA;4. Environmental Studies Program, University of Colorado-Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA
Abstract:Wildfire may be the clearest example to date of a socio-natural hazard that is being exacerbated by climate change, making wildfire an essential lens through which to investigate learning and adaptation in the Anthropocene. Here, we study discourse about simultaneous and recurring catastrophic wildfires in Colorado newspapers. We find that the wildfires’ anniversaries served as opportunities for critical reflection on hazard causality and mitigation in local media, particularly the first anniversary and especially for a community that experienced two catastrophic wildfires in a row. Two mediated prospective memory practices—invoking hindsight as foresight and recognizing a new normal—contributed to this discourse. However, learning and adaptation discourse faded in local media at later anniversaries. These findings contribute to learning and adaptation scholarship by connecting the concept of mediated prospective memory to disaster-related media studies and attending to the intricacies of anniversary commemoration under circumstances of simultaneous and recurring disasters.
Keywords:Learning and adaptation discourse  wildfire  collective prospective memory  hazard mitigation  anthropocene
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