4.4 Article

Harm and Shaming through Naming: Examining Why Calling the Coronavirus, COVID-19 Virus, Not the Chinese Virus, Matters

Journal

MEDIA PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 5, Pages 639-652

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/15213269.2022.2034021

Keywords

COVID-19; framing; China; Chinese-Americans; Chinese virus; Wuhan virus; Kung flu; prejudice

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This study examined the impact of using geographic names to label the coronavirus in media reports. The findings suggest that this practice is more likely to exacerbate racial prejudice among Republicans and conservatives, who also tend to blame China for the pandemic.
In an effort to stave off racial and geographic prejudices, The World Health Organization (WHO) has advised against naming pathogens for geographic regions. Despite this, some media reports, and prominent politicians, have persisted in calling the coronavirus the Chinese Virus, or some variant thereof. In this pre-registered online experiment (N = 614), we examined the effect media frames and individual factors (i.e., political affiliation and party) had on perceptions of COVID-19, prejudice against Chinese- and Asian-Americans, and attributing blame to China for the coronavirus. We found that articles that labeled the coronavirus the Chinese Virus (versus the COVID-19 Virus) were perceived less favorably by Democrats and liberals, in comparison to Republicans and conservatives, who were also more likely to express greater racial prejudice against Chinese- and Asian-Americans and to blame China for the pandemic. Findings from this study suggest that amongst a host of other variables, media framing has an effect on the public's attitudes and feelings of blame for the pandemic.

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