Mythologizing the face mask: How protective covers became political during the fine-dust and COVID-19 crises in South Korea

IF 0.2 Q4 COMMUNICATION
Tae-Sik Kim
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This study aimed to demonstrate how South Korean news media routinized and sensationalized the face mask amid two recent public health crises: the fine-dust crisis and the COVID-19 epidemic. News media appropriated the mythologized meaning of the face mask as a symbol of individual safety during the two crises. This study analyses news articles to answer three questions: (1) How was wearing the face mask mythologized as a routinized practice in days of uncertain risk? (2) How was the face mask politicized as a mythologized sign indicating China as an external threat? and (3) How was the face mask politicized as a symbolic code of the government’s responsibility for the crisis? Once signified as the primary means of individual protection in the context of Korean risk society, the face mask became politicized amid the shortage of the face mask. Placed in the context of the recent disastrous crises in Korea, China was identified as the culprit not only in the epidemic but also in the shortage of the face mask. The meaning of China as an external threat was continuously strengthened when the South Korean government opted out of the entry ban on Chinese citizens. The last analytic part presents how news media politicized the epidemic by associating the face mask crisis with the Korean government.
神话般的口罩:在韩国的细尘和COVID-19危机期间,防护面罩如何变得政治化
这项研究旨在展示韩国新闻媒体如何在最近的两次公共卫生危机中对口罩进行常规化和耸人听闻:细尘危机和新冠肺炎疫情。在这两次危机中,新闻媒体将口罩的神话意义视为个人安全的象征。这项研究分析了新闻文章,以回答三个问题:(1)在风险不确定的日子里,戴口罩是如何被神话为一种常规做法的?(2) 口罩是如何被政治化为表明中国是外部威胁的神话标志的?以及(3)口罩是如何作为政府应对危机责任的象征性代码而被政治化的?口罩一度被视为韩国风险社会中个人保护的主要手段,但在口罩短缺的情况下,口罩变得政治化了。放在韩国最近灾难性危机的背景下,中国不仅被认定为疫情的罪魁祸首,而且被认定为口罩短缺的罪魁祸首。当韩国政府选择取消对中国公民的入境禁令时,中国作为外部威胁的意义不断加强。最后一个分析部分介绍了新闻媒体如何通过将口罩危机与韩国政府联系起来,将疫情政治化。
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
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics (MCP) is a peer-reviewed journal aiming at analysing social and cultural communication processes with an interdisciplinary approach. MCP pays attention to contemporary issues striving to encourage academic responses to pressing world events, offering policy-oriented thinking. The content focus is critical, in-depth analysis and engaged research of the intersections of communication and media studies, sociology, politics, economics, and cultural studies with the aim of keeping academic analysis in dialogue with the practical world of communications, culture and politics. The journal publishes theoretical and empirical contributions from a wide and diverse community of researchers, and from any methodological and epistemological approach.
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