International Journal ofPhilology of marine conservation analyzing the role of language and narrative in shaping public perceptions of marine ecosystems
Nozigul Gulomjonova Komila Gayubova Mahliyo Saydaliyeva Uktam Abdinazarov Sevara Mamadiyorova Dilfuza Rasulmukhamedova Zakhro Shukurova Farangiz NormurodovaServing to enhance and shape conservation strategies, it's crucial to women's roles as storytellers and their impact at the narrative interface with the public around marine ecosystems. This research examines the narrative attitude toward the ocean by attempting to fill the gaps in the philology of marine conservation by studying the promotion rhetoric marine conservation awareness texts. In the public marine domain, language serves to transmit cognitive scientific understanding and the emotional and ethical scaffolding language to frame the marine conservation and the public. This study is within the broader framework of marine conservation communications research, designed to understand the impact of the interfaces – communications strategies, media, and education and public outreach. Engaging in an interdisciplinary approach which fuses the three fields - narrative and ecosystem framing in the conservation rhetoric of marine ecosystems, and marine ecosystem’s linguistic analysis, conservation marine ecosystem, and the framing and articulation of the interface of marine mentalities this study hopes to achieve measurement of the narrative might. The outcomes implies that strategically constructed stories can alter public perceptions, boost environmental literacy, and motivate changeable behaviors toward marine conservation. This paper demonstrates that advocacy for marine conservation should pay particular attention to the development of strategically impactful communicative frameworks, and to the marine environmental defense advocacy, in particular, suggests more profound linguistic and other socio-communicative considerations of advocacy for enhanced socio-communicative advocacy frameworks.