Laurentian University, Canada.
Health (London). 2023 Sep;27(5):770-788. doi: 10.1177/13634593211064115. Epub 2021 Dec 7.
The COVID-19 pandemic has augmented discourses of individual citizen responsibility for collective health. This article explores how British Columbia, Canada's widely praised COVID-19 communication participates in the development of neo-communitarian "active citizenship" governmentalities focused on the civic duty of voluntarily taking responsibility for the health of one's community. We do so by investigating how public health updates from BC's acclaimed Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry articulate this civic imperative through the rhetorical constitution of the "good covid citizen." Our rhetorical analysis shows how this pro-social communication interpellates citizens within a discourse of behavioral, epistemic, and ethical responsibilisation. The communal ethos constituted through this public health communication significantly increases the burden of personal responsibility for health beyond norms of self-care. Making the protection of community health primarily the responsibility of individual citizens also presumes a privileged identity of empowered, active agency and implicitly excludes citizens who lack the means to successfully fulfill the expectations of good covid citizenship.
新冠疫情加剧了个人对集体健康负责的论调。本文探讨了加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省备受赞誉的新冠疫情传播方式如何参与到以公民自觉为社区健康负责为重点的新社群主义“积极公民”治理模式的发展中。我们通过调查不列颠哥伦比亚省备受赞誉的省级卫生官员邦妮·亨利博士(Bonnie Henry)的公共卫生更新内容,通过对“好的新冠公民”的修辞构建来阐明这一公民义务。我们的修辞分析表明,这种亲社会传播如何通过行为、认识论和伦理责任的话语将公民召唤进来。通过这种公共卫生传播构成的社区风气显著增加了个人对健康负责的负担,超出了自我保健的规范。使保护社区健康主要成为公民个人的责任,也假定了有权能的、积极的代理的特权身份,并且隐含地排除了那些缺乏成功履行好的新冠公民身份期望的手段的公民。