(To see other currencies, click on price)
MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
Showcases an agile humanities response to one of the most pressing challenges of contemporary times.
Demonstrates truly global understandings of the pandemic through linguistic, cultural and translational encounters beyond the Anglosphere.
Covers over 100 countries, 20 languages and a rich diversity of source material (press conferences, political speeches, interviews, journalism, literature, graphic art, social media and data visualisations).
Underpinned by an ethos of inclusion, collaboration and cross-disciplinarity; features work by leading scholars from across the world.
Has implications for future pandemic responses, at cultural, societal, political and policy levels.
Contents:
Table of Contents
1. Are We All in This Together?
Piotr Blumczynski and Steven Wilson (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
PART I: COVID-19 and the Global Construction of Language
2. Worldmaking in the Time of COVID-19: The Challenge of the Local and the Global
Catherine Boyle and Renata Brandao (King's College London, UK)
3. SARS-CoV-2 and Discursive Inoculation in France: Lessons from HIV/AIDS
Loic Bourdeau (University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA) and V. Hunter Capps (SUNY Buffalo, USA)
4. War Metaphors during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Persuasion and Manipulation
Patrizia Piredda (University of Oxford, UK)
5. Prophylactic Nationalism: COVID-19 in Thai Public Health Discourse
Wanrug Suwanwattana (Thammasat University, Thailand)
6. COVID-19 as a Foreign Language: How France Learned the Language of the Pandemic
Emilie Garrigou-Kempton (Pomona College, California, USA)
PART II: Translating and Communicating COVID-19
7. Localising Science News Flows in a Global Pandemic: Translational Sourcing Practices in Flemish Reporting on COVID-19 Vaccine Studies
Elisa Nelissen and Jack McMartin (KU Leuven, Belgium)
8. Community Trust in Translations of Official COVID-19 Communications in Australia: An Ethical Dilemma Between Academics and News Media
Anthony Pym, Maria Karidakis, John Hajek, Robyn Woodward-Kron, Riccardo Amorati (University of Melbourne, Australia), and Bei Hu (National University of Singapore)
9. Risk and Crisis Communication during COVID-19 in Linguistically and Culturally Diverse Communities: A Scoping Review of the Available Evidence
Demi Krystallidou and Sabine Braun (University of Surrey, UK)
10. A Lockdown by Any Other Name: Populist Rhetoric as a Communication Strategy for COVID-19 in Duterte's Philippines
Marlon James Sales (University of Michigan, USA)
11. Prophylactic Language Use: The Case of Deaf Signers in England and Their (Lack of) Access to Government Information during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Jemina Napier and Robert Adam (Herriot-Watt University, UK)
12. A Pandemic Accompanied by an Infodemic: How Do Deaf Signers in Flanders Make Informed Decisions? A Preliminary Small-scale Study
Jorn Rijckaert and Karolien Gebruers (Belgium)
PART III: Translational Cultural Responses to COVID-19
13. The Visual Language of COVID-19: Narrative, Data, and Emotion in Online Health Communications
Kirsten Ostherr (Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA)
14. Reading COVID-19 through Dante: A Literature-Based, Bilingual, and Translational Approach to Making Sense of the Pandemic
Beatrice Sica (University College London, UK)
15. COVID-19 Bandes dessinees: Reframing Medical Heroism in French-Language Graphic Novels
Steven Wilson (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
16. Translational Futures: Notes on Ecology and Translation from the COVID-19 Crisis
Marta Arnaldi (University of Oxford, UK)
List of Contributors
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: November, 2022
Pages: 264
Weight: 648g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Public Health