ABSTRACT

Covid-19 in International Media: Global Pandemic Responses 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.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and international media—issues, challenges, and opportunities

part I|59 pages

Cultural differences in communication and identity

chapter 1|10 pages

Coronavirus response asymmetries in the Global North and Global South

New challenges and recommendations

chapter 2|11 pages

Between declarations of war and praying for help

Analyzing heads of states' speeches from a cross-cultural point of view

chapter 3|11 pages

Unsettled belongings in deglobalization

Chinese immigrants' struggle for political identity by using transnational media in the COVID-19 pandemic

chapter 4|10 pages

Framing the pandemic as a conflict between China and Taiwan

Analysis of COVID-19 discourse on Taiwanese social media

chapter 5|15 pages

Comparing coronavirus online searching and media reporting

Alignment or disconnect? A big data analysis of media reportage and public information seeking in Nigeria

part II|46 pages

Responses to regulation

chapter 6|10 pages

Imagining pandemic as a failure

Writing, memory, and forgetting under COVID-19 in China

chapter 7|10 pages

Arrest of the public interest or fight for public health in Serbia

Contrasting roles of professional and citizen journalists

chapter 8|14 pages

“We don't want to cause public panic”

Pandemic communication of the Indonesian Government responding to COVID-19

chapter 9|10 pages

Pathological borders

How the coronavirus pandemic strengthened depictions of the Cyprus partition in the media and by the government

part III|84 pages

Responses to regulation

chapter 10|10 pages

Digital media and COVID-19 in the UK and India

Challenges and constructive contributions

chapter 11|11 pages

New Zealand's success in tackling COVID-19

How Ardern's government effectively used social media and consistent messaging during the global pandemic

chapter 12|12 pages

Coronavirus pandemic

A historical handshake between the mainstream media and social media in response to COVID-19 in Vietnam

chapter 13|10 pages

Bloggers against panic

Russian-speaking Instagram bloggers in China and Italy reporting about COVID-19

chapter 14|10 pages

Reimagined communities in the fight against the invisible enemy

Soccer and the national question in Spain

chapter 16|15 pages

Exploring the COVID-19 social media infodemic

Health communication challenges and opportunities

part IV|48 pages

Risk, space, and cyberattacks

chapter 17|11 pages

Manufacturing fear

infodemics and scaremongering about coronavirus and Ebola epidemics on social media platforms in West Africa

chapter 18|10 pages

Space matters in narrating the catastrophe

Relational riskscapes of COVID-19, dominant discourses, and the example of Turkey

chapter 19|15 pages

Risk society in the age of pandemics

Disaster reporting in the media—Ebola and COVID-19

chapter 20|10 pages

Abusing the COVID-19 pan(dem)ic

A perfect storm for online scams