1st Edition
Folk Devils and Moral Panics in the COVID-19 Pandemic
Folk Devils and Moral Panics in the COVID-19 Pandemic analyses the phenomena of moral panics surrounding so-called folk devils in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In this volume, internationally recognised moral panic scholars from disciplines including sociology, media studies, criminology, and cultural studies examine case studies of moral panics related to the COVID-19 pandemic. These analyses consider the different social, political, economic, organisational, and cultural contexts within which such moral panics emerged and assess how the concept of moral panic can be deployed to offer novel insights into sociocultural responses to the outbreak. By utilising both classical approaches to moral panic analysis and more recent trends, chapters discuss the utility of the concept of moral panic that is, for the first time, applied to a global-scale event like the COVID-19 pandemic.
This volume will be of interest to students and scholars in the social sciences with an interest in moral panics, responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the media and popular culture.
Folk devils and moral panics in the COVID-19 pandemic: An introduction
Morena Tartari
1. Ten dimensions of dispute over moral panic theory in an age of COVID
Matthew David
2. COVID-19 in social problems marketplaces
Joel Best, Brian Monahan and Clara S. Mey
3. The ‘crazies’ are panicking’. High-vis folk devils and the co-opting of moral panic in Australia
Milica Stilinovic, Zainul Swaleh and Catharine Lumby
4. Understanding the protest movements against the COVID-19 public policy in France as a moral panic
Zakaria Bendali, Alexandre Dafflon and Olivier Fillieule
5. Moral panics and health-related misinformation: When the audience becomes co-producer
Anita Lavorgna and Ester Massa
6. Framing social drama: Panic, protest and the Canadian trucker convoy
Graham Knight
7. Mutuality vs freedom: Competing moral panics in the UK debate over the wearing of masks during the pandemic
Jeremy Collins
8. Voices of reason, voices of moralization. Analysing moralising discourse in scientific claims in news media in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic in Sweden, 2020-2022
Frida Skog and Ragnar Lundström
9. Neo-liberal background of pandemic-related moral panic in Polish press discourse
Jacek Burski
10. “Infected migrants”: The Italian political discourse about immigration during the pandemic: a renewed moral panic?
Dario Lucchesi
Folk Devils and moral panics in the COVID-19 pandemic: Final remarks
Morena Tartari
Biography
Morena Tartari is Associate Professor of Criminology and Policing in the Department of Social Sciences of Northumbria University, United Kingdom. She is a former Marie Curie postdoctoral fellow (University of Antwerp, Belgium). Her research has explored social issues including moral panics surrounding satanic ritual abuse, the stigmatisation of single mothers in institutional contexts, non-religious identities, practices and values, parenting cultures and digital risks and crimes. She is the author of several publications on the topic of moral panic. She is an active member of the Society for the Study of Social Problems.
Cirus Rinaldi is Associate Professor of Sociology of Law, Deviance, and Social Change in the Department of Cultures and Societies of the University of Palermo, Italy, where he also coordinates the Bodies, Rights and Conflicts Research Group. His research explores deviance theory, sociological theories of sexuality, male sex work and LGBTQI+ issues. He is the author of the books Sesso, Sè e Società. Per una sociologia delle sessualità (2016) and Uomini che si fanno pagare: Genere, identità e sessualità nel sex work maschile tra devianza e nuove forme di normalizzazione (2020) in addition to many journal articles and contributions to edited collections.
Cosimo Marco Scarcelli is Associate Professor of Sociology of Culture and Communication in the Department of Philosophy, Sociology, Education and Applied Psychology at the University of Padua, Italy, where he is also the Director of the BD Communication Programme. His research explores sexuality, gender, masculinities, digital culture, pornography, intimacies, love, emotions, and young people. He is particularly interested in qualitative and participatory research. He is the principal editor of Gender and Sexuality in the European Media (Routledge, 2021), associate editor of The International Encyclopedia of Gender, Media, and Communication (Wiley, 2020), and author of numerous journal articles. He is also an editor of the Journal of Gender Studies.
“By applying the analytical tools of moral panic, a group of dedicated first-rate interdisciplinary scholars shine fresh new and innovative lights on global reactions to the COVID-19 pandemic. Readers will thus find a fascinating and positively reinforcing learning experience.”
Nachman Ben-Yehuda, Professor of Sociology, The Hebrew University, Israel
“Stan Cohen and Stuart Hall’s insights about moral panics revived and astutely applied to the COVID crisis.”
Tony Platt, Professor Emeritus and Distinguished Affiliated Scholar, Center for Study of Law and Society, University of California, Berkeley, USA