Literature DB >> 23631645

Manufacturing consent?: Media messages in the mobilization against HIV/AIDS in India and lessons for health communication.

Shamshad Khan1.   

Abstract

Despite repeated calls for a more critical and "culture-centered" approach to health communication, textual analysis of televised public service advertising (PSA) campaigns has been largely neglected, even by critical communication scholars. In the case of "developing" countries in particular, there is an acute shortage of such literature. On the other hand, following the outbreak of major public health diseases such as AIDS, most countries have adopted PSA campaigns as the most preferred means of communicating messages. Drawing on insights from cultural studies (especially Antonio Gramsci and Stuart Hall), this article engages in textual analysis of the televised PSA campaigns launched by the Indian state to prevent HIV/AIDS between 2002 and 2005. Through such analysis, it argues that although few diseases in Indian history have spurred such massive and creative efforts for mass mobilization as AIDS, these efforts, in terms of their ethical implications, have been far from emancipatory. In fact, they have constructed and perpetuated the logic of domination and control along class, gender, sexuality, and knowledge systems, often contradicting and potentially harming the very goal of HIV prevention and of health promotion and empowerment. This article also holds that assessing public health campaigns through textual analysis, a highly neglected tool in health communication, can shed important light on a far more complex and changing nature of the state and public policy, especially in the developing world, thereby opening up space for alternative theorizing for health communication and social change.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23631645     DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2012.753139

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Commun        ISSN: 1041-0236


  2 in total

1.  "Facing Our Fears": Using facilitated film viewings to engage communities in HIV research involving MSM in Kenya.

Authors:  Bernadette Kombo; Salla Sariola; Evanson Gichuru; Sassy Molyneux; Eduard J Sanders; Elise van der Elst
Journal:  Cogent Med       Date:  2017-05-27

2.  Suspicious minds: cinematic depiction of distrust during epidemic disease outbreaks.

Authors:  Qijun Han; Daniel R Curtis
Journal:  Med Humanit       Date:  2020-05-28
  2 in total

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