Description
Unlike past outbreaks, epidemics, and pandemics, COVID-19 emerged in a 21st-century digital landscape of instant communication and abundant online platforms, with older models of news and entertainment media mingling with new types of citizen-produced content. In Capturing COVID, Katherine A. Foss makes sense of how this contemporary media landscape shaped the public's knowledge and perceptions of the new pandemic. The book focuses on crucial media moments, including the initial reporting from Wuhan; news and social media content on the Diamond Princess quarantine; stories of inequality, stigma, and injustice; narratives of the vaccine rollout; and representations of pandemic life in popular culture. Drawing on press releases, interviews, websites, blogs, social media posts, and other publicly available materials, and guided by critical media analysis, Foss illuminates how this new digital era profoundly shaped the progression of the pandemic. This media landscape kept people informed and connected, but also led to the politicization of the virus, rampant mis/disinformation, and stigmatizing messaging that contributed to public distrust and division. Capturing COVID deftly helps make sense of the entire affair.
About the Author
Katherine A. Foss is the director of the School of Journalism and Strategic Media at Middle Tennessee State University. She is author of numerous books, including Constructing the Outbreak: Epidemics in Media and Collective Memory, and her work has appeared in both scholarly and popular publications, including the Journal of Communication Inquiry, The Washington Post, The Conversation, and Smithsonian Magazine.
Book Information
ISBN 9781625348296
Author Katherine A. Foss
Format Hardback
Page Count 264
Imprint University of Massachusetts Press
Publisher University of Massachusetts Press