Anti-Vaccination and the Media
eBook - ePub

Anti-Vaccination and the Media

Historical Perspectives

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Anti-Vaccination and the Media

Historical Perspectives

About this book

This book explores narratives of vaccine hesitancy using samples from the UK press, and looks at the ways these have changed between the 1950s and the present. The work draws on a variety of research instruments including semantic network analysis and analysis of metaphor to provide a rich description of anti-vaccine narratives in different historical periods. 


The work considers the ways that concerns about and resistance to inoculation were informed by cultural and social pressures in two case studies, firstly that of polio in the 1950s and secondly the so called 'pertussis crisis' of the 1970s, wherein a period of social activism and newspaper campaigning  led UK and US governments to offer compensation schemes for vaccine damaged children. The studies chosen provide a detailed comparison of the politics of childhood inoculation over two eras in the UK. 
Chapters also cover the use of metaphor and representational analysis in health communication, comparing ways in which the work of Moscovici, Sontag and other theorists can be used to provide complementary insights, and the affordances and concerns around the use of 'big data' analyses in historical work. The work also features discussion of the implications of the findings for approaches to more recent vaccination crisis points. This book argues that anti-vaccination narratives, far from showing a stable and coherent set of concerns, are highly mutable. The work compares anti-vaccination and conspiracy theory narratives, drawing out areas of continuity and schism. 

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Yes, you can access Anti-Vaccination and the Media by Allison Cavanagh in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Science History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Front Matter
  3. 1. Introduction
  4. 2. Metaphor and Representation in the Mediation of Illness
  5. 3. Relational and ‘Big Data’ Approaches to Representation in Understanding Illness
  6. 4. Polio
  7. 5. Pertussis
  8. 6. Covid Discourses, Populist and Academic
  9. 7. Conclusion
  10. Back Matter