EastEnders and the environment : communicating social change in prime-time?
Henderson, Lesley (2025) EastEnders and the environment : communicating social change in prime-time? Critical Studies in Television. ISSN 1749-6039 (In Press)
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Abstract
BBC flagship continuing drama EastEnders is widely accepted as an exemplar of the ‘entertainment-education’ approach, embodying a strong public service ideology and rooted in Reithian values. In this paper I explore the definitional role of the programme in addressing environmental issues in the digital age and argue that this is a novel opportunity to examine the limits and possibilities of the genre to engage with anthropogenic crises. My analysis is informed by the perspectives of EastEnders scriptwriters/consultants and sustainability professionals who perceived prime time drama as providing a unique tool to engage distinctive diverse audiences who are marginalised by blue-chip nature series. For the first time I address the context in which popular environmental storylines are produced in the UK and identify how storytelling is mediated by the contemporary hostile television environment with intense competition from streaming channels and social media platforms. I outline how dynamics of environmental storytelling are shaped explicitly by external factors including organisational commitment to climate content and the perceived role of the BBC in catalysing a ‘national conversation’. Powerful tacit assumptions concerning ‘good stories’ being rooted in interpersonal friction potentially risk presenting a false equivalency - given that environmental scientists are reluctant to collaborate with this ‘low status’ media product. Continuing drama facilitates distinct opportunities to connect climate crisis to the lived experience through human centred narratives however the contemporary television production context is in a state of flux and dated assumptions concerning its role in constructing public attitudes and beliefs need to be revisited.
ORCID iDs
Henderson, Lesley
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Item type: Article ID code: 92438 Dates: DateEvent7 January 2025Published7 January 2025AcceptedSubjects: Social Sciences > Transportation and Communications
Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > Environmental SciencesDepartment: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Humanities > Journalism, Media and Communication Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 24 Mar 2025 15:10 Last modified: 24 Mar 2025 15:10 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/92438