Regulatory Rhetoric and Mediated Health Narratives

Madison A. Krall
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Abstract

During the summer of 1962, news media brought the issue of drug regulation to the public’s attention in a pivotal way when broadcasting journalists reported on Sherri Chessen Finkbine’s decision to terminate her pregnancy after taking sleeping pills containing thalidomide in her first trimester. In this analysis, I draw from New York Times and Arizona Republic coverage of Finkbine’s legal case to demonstrate how the media coverage surrounding Finkbine’s story supported through discursive justification the extensive regulation of women’s bodies in subsequent legislative initiatives. I argue that three argumentative warrants dominated the mediated narratives put forward by this coverage to situate women as: (1) inconsistent and hysterical; (2) overtly dependent on others for guidance and support; and (3) incapable of providing concrete cautionary counsel. Ultimately, I argue that these specific, mediated warrants functioned to define and contextualize regulation and regulatory discourse in the context of women’s health in the years to follow, including the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling overturning Roe v. Wade in the twenty-first century.
监管修辞与中介健康叙事
1962年夏天,当广播记者报道雪莉·切森·芬克宾在怀孕前三个月服用含有沙利度胺的安眠药后决定终止妊娠时,新闻媒体以一种关键的方式将药物监管问题引起了公众的注意。在这一分析中,我从《纽约时报》和《亚利桑那共和报》对芬克宾法律案件的报道中,展示了围绕芬克宾故事的媒体报道是如何通过话语辩护来支持在随后的立法倡议中对妇女身体的广泛监管的。我认为,这篇报道所提出的将女性定位为:(1)前后矛盾、歇斯底里;(2)过分依赖他人的指导和支持的;(三)不能提供具体告诫的。最后,我认为,这些具体的、调解的授权在随后的几年里,在妇女健康的背景下,包括美国最高法院在21世纪推翻罗伊诉韦德案的裁决,起到了定义和背景化监管和监管话语的作用。
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