El papel de los discursos conspiranoicos y antivacunas en la economía de las acciones durante la pandemia de SARS-CoV-2.
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthorship
Serrano García, RafaelPalabras clave
Covid-19Vaccine hesitancy
Conspiracy theories
Discourse analysis
Conspiranoia
Metodología cualitativa
Qualitative research
Antivacunas
Análisis de discurso
TFGs en libre acceso
Direction
Martin Criado, Enrique


Publication date
2022Abstract
Objective: To analyse and understand conspiracy discourses related to the Covid-19,
particularly those referring to the vaccination campaign.
Methods: Qualitative study of three individual interviews with people who previously
expressed conspiracy discourses in the province of Córdoba (Spain).
Results: The results of the discourse analysis shows that tags like anti-vaccine and conspiracy
theory have negative connotations so people do not identify themselves with those labels.
Also people strategically define those categories so they wouldn't apply to their discourses.
They do this by using rhetorical strategies like avoiding responsibility, ambiguity or labelling
other persons as true conspiracy believers rather than themselves trying to appear as moderate
by contrast.
Conclusions: We have found that conspiracy discourses are heterogeneous but they share
certain points like mistrust in the mass media or elaborate complex theories in which a huge
amount of agents are inv ...
Objective: To analyse and understand conspiracy discourses related to the Covid-19,
particularly those referring to the vaccination campaign.
Methods: Qualitative study of three individual interviews with people who previously
expressed conspiracy discourses in the province of Córdoba (Spain).
Results: The results of the discourse analysis shows that tags like anti-vaccine and conspiracy
theory have negative connotations so people do not identify themselves with those labels.
Also people strategically define those categories so they wouldn't apply to their discourses.
They do this by using rhetorical strategies like avoiding responsibility, ambiguity or labelling
other persons as true conspiracy believers rather than themselves trying to appear as moderate
by contrast.
Conclusions: We have found that conspiracy discourses are heterogeneous but they share
certain points like mistrust in the mass media or elaborate complex theories in which a huge
amount of agents are involved in the creation of this crisis. There seems to be at least two
different profiles of people that reproduce this discourses, one that is more oriented to
mistrust in the government discourses, and other that is more vaccine hesitancy orientated.
Conspiracy and anti-vaccine discourses are really becoming an important issue in our society
so more scientific investigation should be done in this field. The results of this paper could
serve as a start point for more research in the future