5611-Article Text-23292-1-10-20220428.pdf (561.9 kB)
?Disease X and Africa: how a scientific metaphor entered popular imaginaries of the online public during the COVID-19 pandemic
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-10, 06:35 authored by Kelley Sams, Catherine GrantCatherine Grant, Alice Desclaux, Khoudia SowIn 2018, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced the addition of Disease X, a hypothetical infectious threat, to its blueprint list of priority diseases. In the construction of discourse that circulated following this announcement, conceptions of Disease X intersected with representations of Africa. In our article, we share a broad strokes analysis of internet narratives about Disease X and Africa in the six months before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic (July–December 2019) and during its first six months (January–June 2020). Our analysis focuses on how the scientific concept of Disease X was applied by ‘non-experts’ to make meaning from risk, uncertainty, and response. These non-experts drew in parallel upon more general representations of power, fear, and danger. This research is particularly relevant at the time of writing, as online narratives about COVID-19 vaccination are shaping vaccine anxiety throughout the world by drawing upon similar conceptions of agency and inequality. Because Disease X in Africa still looms as a perceived future threat, considering the narratives presented in this paper can provide insight into how people create meaning when faced with a scientific concept, a global health crisis, and the idea that there are other crises yet to come.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Published version
Journal
Medicine Anthropology TheoryISSN
2405-691XPublisher
Edinburgh University LibraryExternal DOI
Issue
2Volume
9Page range
1-28Department affiliated with
- Institute of Development Studies Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes