‘Meat gives you cancer’. The popularisation of scientific news with public health relevance


Abstract


Early in October 2015, the International Agency on Cancer Research (IARC 2015a) evaluated the carcinogenicity of red and processed meat. On 24 October, the World Health Organization (WHO 2015a) issued a statement reporting the IARC press release on the subject. On 22 October, the Daily Mail (2015) anticipated these results, giving rise to the latest ‘meat-cancer scare’ on the international media.

This case study analyses a small corpus of institutional documents and English-language press articles, collected in the eight days following the publication of the news.

Based on a sociological model of public vs popular communication of science (Bucchi, Neresini 2008), integrated with methodological tools from critical discourse analysis (Fairclough 1995, 2003; Eisenhart, Johnstone 2008; Wodak 2013), argumentation theory (van Eemeren, Grootendorst2004), and making reference to science popularisation studies (Calsamiglia 2003; Garzone 2006; Caliendo, Bongo 2014), the qualitative analysis shows how the pattern of diffusion of scientific news with public health relevance is changing. No longer following a top-down approach, power relations at work in this type of communication are changing, being increasingly affected by bottom-up interference and feedback, in a progressively more dialogic and negotiated scenario of communication.

 


DOI Code: 10.1285/i22390359v26p357

Keywords: health discourse, institutional discourse, online media, discourse analysis, science popularisation

References


Allan S. 2002, Media, risk and science, Open University Press, Buckingham/Philadelphia.

Bednarek M. 2009, Evaluation in media discourse: Analysis of a newspaper corpus, Continuum, New York, London.

Bell A. 1991, The Language of News Media, Blackwell, Oxford.

Besnier N. 1993, Reported Speech and Affect on Nukulaelae Atoll, in Hill J.H. and Irvine J.T. (eds.) Responsibility and Evidence in Oral Discourse, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 161-181.

Brownell S.E., Price J.V. and Steinman L.2013, Science Communication to the General Public: Why We Need to Teach Undergraduate and Graduate Students this Skill as Part of Their Formal Scientific Training, in “The Journal of Undergraduate Neuroscience Education” 12[1], pp. E6–E10.

Bouvard V., Loomis D., Guyton K.Z., Grosse Y., Ghissassi F.E., Benbrahim-Tallaa L., Guha N., Heidi Mattock H., Straif K. 2015, Carcinogenicity of consumption of red and processed meat, in “The Lancet Oncology” 16[16], pp. 1599-1600.

Bucchi M. 1998, Science and the media: Alternative routes in scientific communication, London, Routledge.

Bucchi M. and Neresini F. 2008, Science and public participation, in Hackett E.J. et al. (eds.) New Handbook of Science and Technology Studies, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass, pp. 571-597.

Caliendo G. and Bongo G. 2014, The Language of Popularization: Theoretical and Descriptive Models, Peter Lang, Bern.

Calsamiglia H. 2003, Popularization discourse, in “Discourse Studies”5[2], pp. 147-173.

Calsamiglia H. and van Dijk T. 2004, Popularisation discourse and knowledge about the genome, in “Discourse and Society” 15[4], pp. 269-289.

Calsamiglia H. and López Ferrero C. 2003, Role and position of scientific voices: reported speech in the media, in “Discourse Studies” 5[2], pp. 147-73.

Catenaccio P., Cotter C., De Smedt M., Garzone G., Jacobs G., Macgilchrist F., Lams L., Perrin D., Richardson J.E., Van Hout T. and Van Praet E.2011, Towards a linguistics of news production, in “Journal of Pragmatics” 43[7], pp. 1843-52.

Cotter C. 2010, Investigating the language of journalism, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Crompton P. 1997, Hedging in Academic Writing: Some Theoretical Problems, in “English for Specific Purposes” 16[4], pp. 271-287.

Eisenhart C. and Johnstone B. 2008, Discourse Analysis and Rhetorical Studies, in Johnstone B. and Eisenhart C. (eds.) Rhetoric in Detail: Discourse Analyses of Rhetorical Talk and Text, John Benjamins, Amsterdam, Philadelphia, pp. 3-21.

Fairclough N. 1995, Critical Discourse Analysis: The Critical Study of Language, Longman, London/New York.

Fairclough N. 2003, Analysing Discourse, Routledge, London.

Fowler R. 1991, Language in the News, Routledge, Oxon.

Fraser B. 2010, Pragmatic Competence: the Case of Hedging, in Kaltenböck G., Mihatasch W. and Schneider S. (eds.) New Approaches to Hedging, Emerald, Bingley, pp. 15-34.

Garzone G. 2006, Perspectives on ESP and popularisation, CUEM, Milan.

Gotti M. 2005, Investigating Specialized Discourse, Peter Lang, Bern.

Gotti M. 2014, Reformulation and recontextualization in popularization discourse, in “Ibérica” 27, pp. 15-34.

Gregory J. and Miller S. 1998, Science in public communication, culture and credibility, Basic books, Cambridge MA.

Grundmann R. 2017, The Problem of Expertise in Knowledge Societies, in “Minerva” 55[1], pp. 25–48.

Halliday M.A.K. 1994, An introduction to functional grammar, Edward Arnold, London, 2nd ed.

Henriksen E.K. and Frøyland M. 2000, The contribution of museums to scientific literacy: views from audiences and museum professionals, in “Public Understanding of Science” 9, pp. 393-415.

Horn K. 2001, The Consequences of Citing Hedged Statements in Scientific Research Articles, in “BioScience” 15, pp. 1086-1093.

Hunston S. and Thompson G. (eds.) 2003, Evaluation in text. Authorial stance and the construction of discourse, Oxford University Press, Oxford.

IARC 2015a, Volume 114: Red Meat and Processed Meat, IARC Monographs News, 9 October 2015, http://monographs.iarc.fr/ENG/News/index.php.

IARC 2015b, Volume 114: Red Meat and Processed Meat, IARC Monographs News, 23 October 2015, http://monographs.iarc.fr/ENG/News/index.php.

IARC 2015c, IARC Monographs evaluate consumption of red meat and processed meat, Press release n° 240, 26 October 2015, http://www.iarc.fr/en/media-centre/pr/2015/pdfs/pr240_E.pdf.

Jacobs G. 1999, Preformulating the News. An Analysis of the Metapragmatics of Press Releases, John Benjamins, Amsterdam.

Macrae F. and Wright S. 2015, “Bacon, burgers and sausages are a cancer risk, say world health chiefs”, Daily Mail, 22 October 2015.

Markkanen R. and Schröder H. 1997, Hedges: A Challenge for Pragmatics and Discourse Analysis, in Markkanen R. and Schröder H. (eds.) Hedging and Discourse: Approaches to the Analysis of a Pragmatic Phenomenon in Academic Texts, De Gruyter, Berlin, pp. 3-18.

Metcalfe J. 2014, The theory needed to support science communication practice, presented at“The 13th International Public Communication of Science and Technology Conference”, 5-8 May 2014, Salvador, Brazil.

Moirand S. 2003, Communicative and Cognitive Dimensions of Discourse on Science in the French Mass Media, in “Discourse Studies” 5[2], pp. 175-206.

Myers G. 2003, Discourse studies of scientific popularization: Questioning the boundaries, in “Discourse Studies” 5, pp. 265-279.

Neresini F. 2015, Scienza, Mass Media e Società, PDF presentation, University of Padua, Padua.

Nichols T. 2017, The Death of Expertise. The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why it Matters, Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Peters H.P. 2012, Scientific sources and the mass media: Forms and consequences of medialization, in Rödder S., Franzen M. and Weingart P. (eds.) The Sciences’ Media Connection – Public Communication and its Repercussions, Springer, Dordrecht, pp. 217–239.

Salager-Meyer F. 1994. Hedges and Textual Communicative Function in Medical English Written Discourse, in “English for Specific Purposes” 13[2], pp. 149-171.

Salager-Meyer F. 2006, Advances in medical discourse analysis: Oral and written contexts, Bern, Peter Lang.

Sarangi S. and Roberts C. (eds.) 1999, Talk, Work and Institutional Order: Discourse in Medical, Mediation and Management Settings, Berlin, Mouton de Gruyter.

Sturgis P. and Allum N. 2004, Science in society: re-evaluating the deficit model of public attitudes, in “Public Understanding of Science” 13[1], pp. 55-74.

Trench B. 2008, Towards an Analytical Framework of Science Communication Models, in Cheng D. et al. (eds.) Communicating science in social contexts: new models, new practices, Springer, Dordrecht, pp. 119-138.

van Eemeren F.H. and Grootendorst R. 2004, A systematic theory of argumentation: The pragma-dialectical approach,Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Vicentini A. 2016, Stem cells and pseudo science. The Stamina case as seen in the media, paper presented at the workshop “Exploring bioethically-relevant discourse: research perspectives”, University of Milan, Intercultural and communication mediation department, Sesto San Giovanni (Milan, Italy), 21 ottobre 2016.

Vicentini A. and Grego K. 2016, ‘Vaccines don’t make your baby autistic’: Arguing in favour of vaccines in institutional healthcare communication, in Mohammed D. and Lewinski M. (eds.) Argumentation and Reasoned Action: Proceedings of the First European Conference on Argumentation, Lisbon, 9-12 June 2015, Vol. 2, College Publications, London, pp. 999-1020.

WHO 2015a, Monographs evaluate red meat and processed meat, WHO news, 24 October 2015, http://www.who.int/top-stories-archive/en/index2.html.

WHO 2015b, Links between processed meat and colorectal cancer, Media centre, 29 October 2015, http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/statements/2015/processed-meat-cancer/en/.

Wodak R. (ed.) 2013, Critical Discourse Analysis, Sage, London.

Wynn J. 2017, Citizen Science in the Digital Age: Rhetoric, Science, and Public Engagement, The University Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa, Alabama.


Full Text: PDF

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.
کاغذ a4

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribuzione - Non commerciale - Non opere derivate 3.0 Italia License.