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Making Health Public: How News Coverage Is Remaking Media, Medicine, and Contemporary Life

Autor Charles L. Briggs, Daniel C. Hallin
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 mai 2016
This book examines the relationship between media and medicine, considering the fundamental role of news coverage in constructing wider cultural understandings of health and disease. The authors advance the notion of ‘biomediatization’ and demonstrate how health knowledge is co-produced through connections between dispersed sites and forms of expertise. The chapters offer an innovative combination of media content analysis and ethnographic data on the production and circulation of health news, drawing on work with journalists, clinicians, health officials, medical researchers, marketers, and audiences. The volume provides students and scholars with unique insight into the significance and complexity of what health news does and how it is created.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781138999879
ISBN-10: 1138999873
Pagini: 258
Ilustrații: 22
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Cuprins

Introduction  1. Biocommunicability: Cultural Models of the Production and Circulation of Health Knowledge  2. The Day-to-Day Work of Biomediatization  3. "What Does This Mean for the Rest of Us?" Frames, Voices and the Journalistic Mediation of Health and Medicine  4. "You have to Hit It Early, Hit It Hard": Making "Swine Flu," Preparing for the Next Pandemic  5. Finding the "Buzz," Patrolling the Boundaries: Reporting Pharma and Biotech  6. "Putting that Four-Letter Word on the Table": Voicing and Silencing Race in News Coverage of Health. Conclusion

Recenzii

"Briggs and Hallin have crafted a well-written and engaging text that provides a useful framework for studying health and disease in the 21st century. This book has the potential to inspire anthropologists to take more seriously the role of media in the production and circulation of medical and lay knowledge about health and disease. Biomediatization is an especially valuable contribution to medical anthropology, and the concept could easily take a place alongside and re-shape understandings of many popular conceptual frameworks in medical anthropology such as biomedicalization, biocommunicability, embodiment, performativity/enactment, and pharmaceuticalization."
— William J. Robertson, Anthropology Book Forum (American Anthropological Association)

Descriere

This book examines the relationship between media and medicine, considering the fundamental role of news coverage in constructing wider cultural understandings of health and disease. The authors advance the notion of ‘biomediatization’ and demonstrate how health knowledge is co-produced through connections between dispersed sites and forms of expertise. The chapters offer an innovative combination of media content analysis and ethnographic data on the production and circulation of health news, drawing on work with journalists, clinicians, health officials, medical researchers, marketers, and audiences. The volume provides students and scholars with unique insight into the significance and complexity of what health news does and how it is created.

Notă biografică

Charles L. Briggs is Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at UC Berkeley. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation. His work combines linguistic and medical anthropology with socio-cultural anthropology and folkloristics.
Daniel C. Hallin is Distinguished Professor of Communication, Emeritus, at the University of California, San Diego, and is a Fellow of the International Communication Association. His work concerns journalism, political communication, and the comparative analysis of media systems.