A Dialogue on Un/Precendented Pandemic Rhetorics

Ryan Mitchell, Julie Homchick Crowe, Sara DiCaglio, Lisa DeTora, Brynn Fitzsimmons, Tristin Brynn Hooker, Lisa Kernänen, Michael J. Klein, Melissa Nicolas, Shaunak Sastry
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Abstract

Inspired by conversations at the 2021 Rhetoric Society of America Institute workshop on Pandemic Rhetoric(s), this dialogue assembles graduate student, early-, mid-career, and established rhetoric of health and medicine (RHM) and critical health communication scholars to discuss a keyword that has structured political, social, and biomedical thinking about COVID-19: un/precedented. In identifying un/precedented as an organizing temporal rhetoric for the pandemic, we interrogate how recurrent appeals to the pandemic’s novelty both allow for and limit our capacities to meet the pandemic’s tremendous exigencies head-on. Leveraging our unique scholarly and community commitments, we theorize how un/precedentedness 1) becomes complicit in government inaction, 2) (re)asserts conceptual and literal borders, 3) justifies state and national public health mandates, and 4) obscures other historical and contemporary pandemics. We conclude by offering possibilities for interdisciplinary and longitudinal research into the far-reaching effects of contagious disease.
联合国/预防流行病修辞对话
受2021年美国修辞学会流行病修辞研讨会的启发,这次对话汇集了研究生,早期,中期职业生涯和健康与医学(RHM)的既定修辞以及关键的健康传播学者,讨论了一个关于COVID-19的结构化政治,社会和生物医学思考的关键词:前所未有。在确定“前所未有”是大流行病的一种有组织的时间辞令时,我们质问反复呼吁大流行病的新颖性如何既允许也限制了我们正面应对大流行病巨大紧急情况的能力。利用我们独特的学术和社区承诺,我们理论化了前所未有如何1)成为政府不作为的同谋,2)(重新)断言概念和文字边界,3)为州和国家公共卫生授权辩护,以及4)模糊了其他历史和当代流行病。最后,我们提供了跨学科和纵向研究传染病深远影响的可能性。
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