ABSTRACT

Viral Language considers a range of different types of public communication and their discussion of the Covid-19 pandemic as a way to investigate health communication. The authors introduce and apply a range of approaches informed by linguistic theory to investigate experiences of the pandemic across a variety of public contexts. In doing so, they demonstrate how experiences of health and illness can be shaped by political messaging, scientific research, news articles and advertising.

Through a series of case studies of Covid-related texts, the authors consider aspects of language instruction, information and innovation, showcasing the breadth of topics that can be studied as part of health communication. Furthermore, each case study provides practical guidance on how to carry out investigations using social media texts, how to analyse metaphor, how to track language innovation and how to work with text and images.

Viral Language is critical reading for postgraduate and upper undergraduate students of applied linguistics and health communication.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|29 pages

Politicians' use of metaphor

chapter 6|27 pages

Language change in news on the web

Lexical innovation in response to Covid-19

chapter 7|28 pages

Advertising in the time of coronavirus

chapter 8|14 pages

Concluding remarks