"Not all crises are created equal": Online narratives about COVID-19 and induced earthquakes in the province of Groningen, The Netherlands

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2022-06-18 DOI:10.2458/jpe.5121
Elisabeth N. Moolenaar
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Abstract

his article explores the COVID-19 pandemic as it interacts with other vulnerabilities, risks, and disasters people experience. It examines online narratives about COVID-19 from people suffering from induced seismicity in the province of Groningen, the Netherlands, posted on social media, blogs, and websites, complemented with ethnographic data. Focusing on social and discursive practices, the article looks at how risk, disaster, and crisis are talked about and mobilized. The narrative data shows interrelated layers of vulnerability and the experience of a compounded disaster. Narratives indicate that their composers and sharers understand disasters as produced and constructed, and use COVID-19 to reframe risk, disaster, and crisis. More importantly the data demonstrates how COVID-19 is employed as an opportunity to draw attention to marginality, inequality, and the experience of another type of disaster, and to reveal taken-for-granted power relations and impel political action.
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“并非所有危机都是平等的”:关于新冠肺炎和荷兰格罗宁根省引发地震的在线报道
他的文章探讨了新冠肺炎大流行与人们经历的其他脆弱性、风险和灾难的相互作用。它研究了荷兰格罗宁根省地震活动患者在社交媒体、博客和网站上发布的关于新冠肺炎的在线叙述,并补充了民族志数据。文章聚焦于社会实践和话语实践,探讨了风险、灾难和危机是如何被谈论和动员的。叙述性数据显示了相互关联的脆弱性和复杂灾难的经历。叙述表明,他们的作曲家和分享者将灾难理解为产生和构建的,并使用新冠肺炎来重新定义风险、灾难和危机。更重要的是,这些数据表明,新冠肺炎如何被用作一个机会,吸引人们对边缘化、不平等和另一种灾难的经历的关注,揭示理所当然的权力关系并推动政治行动。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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