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COVID-19 in International Media: Global Pandemic Perspectives

Author: Douglas A. Vakoch | John C. Pollock |

11,850.00

Additional information

Weight 1 kg
Dimensions 47.5 × 35 × 1 cm
Publisher

Routledge

ISBN

9781032020662

Format

Hardcover

Language

English

SKU: TMP_PUB_966 Category: Tags: , , , , Product ID: 21133

Description

Covid-19 in International Media: Global Pandemic ResponsesĀ is one of the first books uniting an international team of scholars to investigate how media address critical social, political, and health issues connected to the 2020-21 COVID-19 outbreak.
The book evaluates unique civic challenges, responsibilities, and opportunities for media worldwide, exploring pandemic social norms that media promote or discourage, and how media serve as instruments of social control and resistance, or of cooperation and representation. These chapters raise significant questions about the roles mainstream or citizen journalists or netizens play or ought to play, enlightening audiences successfully about scientific information on COVID-19 in a pandemic that magnifies social inequality and unequal access to health care, challenging popular beliefs about health and disease prevention and the role of government while the entire world pays close attention.
This book will be of interest to students and faculty of communication studies and journalism, departments of public health, sociology, and social marketing.
Ā 
Table of Contents
Foreword
Perceptions of Pandemics: Communicating about COVID-19 in International Ecosystems
Kirk St.Amant
Preface
COVID-19 in Global Media: Questions and Challenges for Health Communication
John C. Pollock
Introduction
Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) and the Media: Issues and Opportunities
Lisa M. DeTora, Michael J. Klein, and John C. Pollock
I. Cultural Differences in Communication and Identity
Chapter 1.
Coronavirus Response Asymmetries in the Global North and Global South: New Challenges and Recommendations
Phillip Santos
Chapter 2.
Between Declarations of War and Praying for Help: Analyzing Heads of StateĀ“s Speeches from a Cross-cultural Point of View
Eika Auschner, Julia Heitsch, and Zully Paola MartĆ­nez Torres
Chapter 3.
Unsettled Belongings and Deglobalization: Transnational Media Complicate Chinese Immigrantsā€™ Struggle for Political Identity in the COVID-19 Pandemic
Zhipeng Gao
Chapter 4.
Framing the Pandemic as a Conflict between China and Taiwan: Analysis of COVID-19 Discourse on Taiwanese Social Media
Ling-Yi Huang
Chapter 5.
Comparing Coronavirus Online Searching and Media Reporting in Nigeria: Alignment or Disconnect? A Big Data Analysis of Media Reportage of Coronavirus in Nigeria
Mutiu Iyanda Lasisi and Obasanjo Joseph Oyedele
II. Responses to Regulation: Media as Instruments of Social Control or Conflict/Resistance
Chapter 6.
Imagining Pandemic as a Failure: Writing, Memory and Forgetting under COVID-19 in China
Yawen Li and Marius Meinhof
Chapter 7.
Arrest of the Public Interest or Fight for Public Health in Serbia: Contrasting Roles of Professional and Citizen Journalists
Kristina Ćendić
Chapter 8.
ā€œWe donā€™t want to cause public panicā€: Pandemic Communication of Indonesian Government in Responding to COVID-19
Dyah Pitaloka and Nelly Martin-Anatias
Chapter 9.
Pathological Borders: How the Coronavirus Pandemic Strengthened Depictions of the Cyprus Partition in the Media and Government
Daniele Nunziata
III. Responses to Regulation: Media as Instruments of Cooperation and Representation
Chapter 10.
Digital Media, Society, and COVID-19 in the UK and India: Challenges and Constructive Contributions
Indrani Lahiri, Debanjan Banerjee, K. S. Meena, Anish V. Cherian, and Maryam Alsulaimi
Chapter 11.
New Zealandā€™s Success in Tackling COVID-19: How Ardernā€™s Government Effectively Used Social Media and Consistent Messaging During the Global Pandemic
Nelly Martin-Anatias
Chapter 12.
Coronavirus Pandemic: A Historical Handshake between the Mainstream Media and Social Media in Response to COVID-19 in Vietnam
Hang Thi Thuy Dinh and Hien Thi Minh Nguyen
Chapter 13.
Bloggers against Panic: Russian-speaking Instagram Bloggers in China and Italy Reporting about COVID-2019
Anna Smoliarova, Tamara Gromova, and Ekaterina Sharkova
Chapter 14.
Re-imagined Communities in the Fight against the Invisible Enemy: Soccer and the National Question in Spain
Alberto del Campo Tejedor
Chapter 15.
US Nationwide COVID-19 Newspaper Coverage of State and Local Government Responses: Community Structure Theory and a ā€œVulnerabilityā€ Pattern
John C. Pollock, Miranda Crowley, Suchir Govindarajan, Abigail Lewis, Alexis Marta, Radhika Purandare, and James N. Sparano
Chapter 16.
Exploring the COVID-19 Social MediaĀ Infodemic: Health Communication Challenges and Opportunities
Carolyn A. Lin
IV. Risk, Space, and Cyberattacks
Chapter 17.
Manufacturing Fear: Infodemics and Scare Mongering on Coronavirus and Ebola Epidemics on Social Media Platforms in West Africa
Paul Obi and Floribert Patrick C. Endong
Chapter 18.
Space Matters in Anticipating the Catastrophe: Relational Riskscapes of COVID-19, Dominant Discourses, and the Example of Turkey
Şemsettin Tabur
Chapter 19.
Presenting Disasters in the Mediaā€”Ebola and COVID-19: Fear and the ā€œRisk Societyā€ in the Age of Pandemics
DeMond Shondell Miller and Nicola Davis Bivens
Chapter 20.
Abusing the COVID-19 Pan(dem)ic: A Perfect Storm for Online Scams
Kristjan Kikerpill and Andra Siibak