Focusing on the discursive dimension of the COVID-19 pandemic from a semiotic perspective, this book uses semiotic theory and methods to analyse the meaning-making mechanisms and dynamics that occurred during, and revolved around, the pandemic.Demonstrating the utility of semiotic theory, concepts and analytical methods to make sense of discursive phenomena like those triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic, the book explores in detail:· the blame-attribution discourses that emerged at the beginning of the pandemic;· how the coronavirus was brought to life in plastic and visual manifestations as a monster that poses a threat to humans;· how the collective actor ‘the healthcare workers’ was constructed in discourse and axiologised in positive terms;· the semiotics of the body during the pandemic, with a focus on the face, facemasks, social distancing and the uses of the body in online environments;· the idea of a ‘new’ normality following the pandemic.The book examines different dimensions of the COVID-19 pandemic, including examples from Europe, Latin America and the United States and a wide range of images, texts, practices and objects, in order to highlight the importance of its discursive and semiotic nature.
Sebastián Moreno Barreneche is Associate Lecturer at the Faculty of Management and Social Sciences of Universidad ORT Uruguay, Uruguay, and an active researcher of Uruguay’s National Research System (SNI).
List of FiguresPreface1. The Covid-19 Pandemic in Context2. Using Semiotics to Study Contemporary Events3. A Semiotic Account of the Covid-19 Pandemic4. Pandemic Blaming, Shaming and Scapegoating5. The Coronavirus, an Evil Enemy6. The (Super)Heroic Healthcare Workers7. The Pandemic in the Media8. The Body in the Times of a PandemicEpilogue: The Post-Pandemic New NormalNotesReferencesIndex
The Semiotics of the Covid-19 Pandemic is a rigorously executed semiotic analysis of the main features of meaning-making in the exceptional timeframe of the pandemic. It has a multi-methodological foundation and generates many useful analytic categories for those interested in carrying forward its insights in the revivified post-pandemic space-time still struggling to reinstitute a hard to define normality.
Piotr Sadowski, Ireland) Sadowski, Dr Piotr (Visiting Research Fellow, School of English, Trinity College Dublin, Trinity College Dublin, Gregory Paschalidis