Full reference | Yang, Cui; Southwell, Brian G., “Dangerous Disease, Dangerous Women: Health, Anxiety and Advertising in Shanghai from 1928 to 1937” (2004) |
Type | Journal article |
Author(s) | Yang, Cui; Southwell, Brian G. |
Title | “Dangerous Disease, Dangerous Women: Health, Anxiety and Advertising in Shanghai from 1928 to 1937” |
Year | 2004 |
Journal | Critical Public Health |
Volume | 14 |
Number | 2 |
Start page | 149 |
End page | 156 |
Language | English |
Subject | History |
Keywords | culture; press; health |
Abstract | Advertisements related to health, like other media content, often present a site laden with ideological positions & indicators of prominent theories of social relations. in so far as a society is enmeshed in large-scale structural change & tension, eg, such an arena could be one place to find evidence of anxiety & efforts to define scapegoats. in this discussion, the authors briefly explore advertisements related to sexually transmitted disease that appeared in the Chinese newspaper, Shenbao, during the tumultuous Nationalist period from 1928 to 1937. Fear-based appeals, or approaches that employ words & pictures emphasizing negative consequences or expressing a tone of anxiety, were predominant among advertisements assessed. Moreover, women who worked as commercial sex workers often were depicted as a source of danger & societal instability. This analysis joins a growing body of literature that focuses attention on dimensions of health advertisements & media coverage of health beyond the most explicit, intended effects of specific campaigns. |
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