Abstract
Abstract
In this study we look at how pro- and anti-vaccination groups construct alternative knowledge and facts
discursively and linguistically in order to challenge or support the established scientific knowledge on vaccines. Through this
case study we wish to examine how the power of language interacts with a language of power when memes in creative ways mimic,
produce and reproduce scientific language and practices. Drawing on a dialogical-semiotic and a discourse theoretical analytical
strategy, we, first, adopt Austin’s speech act theory and Bakhtin’s concept of speech genres to argue that memes are performative
with an especially illocutionary force and are made up of alien language from scientific discourses. Second, we argue that
Laclau’s discursive approach to how political positions are articulated in an antagonistic terrain allows us to see vaccination
memes as either subversive or supportive of a scientific social imaginary.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,History
Cited by
6 articles.
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