In:A Pragmatic Agenda for Healthcare: Fostering inclusion and active participation through shared understanding
Edited by Sarah Bigi and Maria Grazia Rossi
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 338] 2023
► pp. 75–103
Chapter 3Public disagreements among health experts and their polarizing effects during a pandemic health crisis
A speech-act theoretical perspective
Published online: 17 November 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.338.03lab
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.338.03lab
Abstract
This paper focuses on the communication styles used by health experts when addressing the public about COVID-19, and the negative effects these styles had on the non-expert public’s ability to understand these issues and make well-informed decisions. Specifically, it examines the use of assertive styles within an Austin-inspired speech-act theoretical framework. By analyzing Twitter threads discussing COVID-19 following the first lockdown in Italy, I explore how these communication styles contribute to the polarization of non-experts, aligning them with different experts. In conclusion, I emphasize the importance for health experts to carefully select appropriate communication styles when engaging with the non-expert public to avoid undermining trust in scientific expertise, as observed during the COVID-19 crisis.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.From medical consultations to public discourse on health
- 3.Public disagreements among experts during a health emergency
- 4.Speech acts and communication styles
- 5.Which experts to trust?
- 6.When experts disagree in public: A representative case study
- 6.1“In reality, from the clinical point of view, the virus no longer exists”
- 6.2Beyond expertise: Siding with an expert
- 6.3Beyond expertise: Why trust an expert?
- 6.4Beyond expertise: Why discredit an expert?
- 7.Concluding remarks
Notes References Appendix
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