Affiliation:
1. 0000000106569343Kent State University
Abstract
In addition to the devastating loss of lives, the harm caused by the COVID-19 pandemic to individuals and communities around the world has caused seismic disruptions in economic, social and interpersonal relationships. The pandemic has affected international diplomatic relations as
well by amplifying existing geopolitical tensions. By situating discourses of Africa and Africans within global ferments of pandemic politics, this study interrogates how Africa and its peoples were invoked in global media. Drawing from postcolonial theory and conceptual propositions of Afrophobia,
the study uses multimodal discourse analysis to critically examine news stories that engaged with two phenomena: controversies regarding the African director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO) and xenophobic treatment of Africans in China. Findings indicate elements of Afrophobia
were evident in the Trump Administration’s and US conservative media outlets’ engagement with WHO. Additionally, the study showed the mainstreaming of non-western Afrophobia through the example of the xenophobic treatment of Africans in China. It concludes by proposing a contextual,
intersectional and critical geopolitical analytical optics for a more robust understanding of the global Black experience.
Reference72 articles.
1. An image of Africa;Research in African Literatures,1978
2. China mocks Africa;The Nation,2020
3. An assessment of xenophobic/Afrophobic attacks in South Africa (2008–2015): Whither Batho Pele and Ubuntu principles?;South African Review of Sociology,2017
4. China–US rivalry in Africa fueled by coronavirus,2020
5. Becoming a black Jew: Cultural racism and anti-racism in contemporary Israel;Social Identities,2004
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献