The victims, villains and heroes of 'panic buying': News media attribution of responsibility for COVID-19 stockpiling.

IF 1.4 2区 社会学 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Tarryn Phillips, Carmen Vargas, Melissa Graham, Danielle Couch, Deborah Gleeson
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Societies often respond to a crisis by attributing blame to some groups while constructing others as victims and heroes. While it has received scant sociological attention, 'panic buying' is a critical indicator of such public sentiment at the onset of a crisis, and thus a crucial site for analysis. This article traces dynamics of blame in news media representations of an extreme period of panic buying during COVID-19 in Australia. Analysis reveals that lower socio-economic and ethnically diverse consumers were blamed disproportionately. Unlike wealthier consumers who bulk-bought online, shoppers filling trollies in-store were depicted as selfish and shameful, described using dehumanising language, and portrayed as 'villains' who threatened social order. Supermarkets were cast simultaneously as 'victims' of consumer aggression and 'heroes' for their moral leadership, trustworthiness and problem-solving. This portrayal misunderstands the socio-emotional drivers of panic buying, exacerbates stigma towards already disadvantaged groups, and veils the corporate profiteering that encourages stockpiling.

“恐慌性购买”的受害者、恶棍和英雄:新闻媒体对COVID-19储备的责任归属。
社会对危机的反应往往是把责任归咎于一些群体,而把另一些群体塑造成受害者和英雄。“恐慌性购买”是危机开始时公众情绪的一个重要指标,因此是一个重要的分析场所,但它很少受到社会学的关注。本文追溯了新闻媒体对澳大利亚新冠肺炎期间极端恐慌性购买时期的指责动态。分析显示,社会经济和种族多元化程度较低的消费者受到了不成比例的指责。与在网上大量购买商品的富裕消费者不同,在店内装满购物车的购物者被描绘成自私和可耻的人,使用不人道的语言,并被描绘成威胁社会秩序的“恶棍”。超市被同时塑造成消费者侵犯行为的“受害者”和道德领导、诚信和解决问题的“英雄”。这种描述误解了恐慌性购买的社会情感驱动因素,加剧了对已经处于不利地位的群体的污名,并掩盖了鼓励囤积的企业暴利行为。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
8.30%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: The Journal of Sociology is an international peer reviewed journal that publishes the highest quality original research in the social sciences.
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