School of Journalism, Writing and Media, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Med Humanit. 2022 Mar;48(1):9-16. doi: 10.1136/medhum-2020-012045. Epub 2021 Jan 15.
Dominant understandings of genre-as-form have limited our abilities to perceive health awareness: we recognise, and expect, health awareness campaigns from governmental and non-profit agencies. Inversely, we often fail to recognise, or name, health awareness as such when it comes from other sources, such as commercial marketing or advertisements for products. However, rhetorical genre theory centres attention on action brought about by form and, as such, rhetorical genre provides tools for recognising instances of health awareness often escape our notice. One such example is critical-illness insurance marketing. In this article, I argue that critical-illness insurance marketing draws on the same appeals found in cancer awareness campaigns. Through a comparative analysis, I show that Colorectal Cancer Canada and critical-illness insurance marketing represent unpreparedness, rather than cancer, as the exigence, or the problem to be overcome through public discourse, and as such, share a genre of what I call 'health awareness as preparedness'.
我们认识到并期望政府和非营利机构开展健康意识宣传活动。相反,当健康意识来自其他来源,如商业营销或产品广告时,我们往往无法识别或命名它。然而,修辞体裁理论关注形式带来的行动,因此,修辞体裁为识别我们通常忽略的健康意识实例提供了工具。一个这样的例子是重大疾病保险营销。在本文中,我认为重大疾病保险营销借鉴了癌症意识宣传活动中相同的诉求。通过比较分析,我表明加拿大大肠癌协会和重大疾病保险营销将准备不足而不是癌症视为需要通过公共话语来克服的问题,因此,它们具有一种我称之为“作为准备的健康意识”的体裁。