This book offers strong rationales for adopting a critical view of health communication by demonstrating how theories and critical practices can be enriched by foregrounding issues of power, politics, and culture.
In health communication, critical approaches highlight the role of communication in constituting, reinforcing, and resisting inequitable power relations that underly the sociocultural and structural barriers to well-being. This book highlights the theoretical and practical contributions of critical health communication to allow readers to gain in-depth understanding of the tools and methods required to conduct critical research. It includes a broad array of approaches to health communication scholarship such as rhetorical, feminist, anti-racist and intersectional perspectives. Chapters present research from a variety of international and local contexts addressing medical and public health challenges and center issues of power, resistance, voice, and social change from marginalized perspectives.
Outlining the centrality of critical approaches to theorizing and practicing health communication in more equitable, ethical, and effective ways, this book will be of interest to scholars and graduate students in health communication, critical and cultural communication, as well as other health-related courses.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
"Critical scholars approach compassion not as sentiment but as praxis-analytically and ethically interrogating the conditions that shape human suffering. This volume confronts the silences and inequalities that perpetuate systemic harm in health contexts, asking: Why do we accept such injustice? And how can we, as scholars and practitioners, demand and enact something better?"
Elaine Hsieh, University of Minnesota, USA
"Critical Health Communication: Theory and Practice explores how power, politics, and culture are entwined in all aspects of current health communication research, filling a much-needed gap in understanding current health issues. Bridging patients, professionals, and policy, it reveals the urgent need for conducting critical research to transform health communication-and ultimately, health outcomes-worldwide."
Kathryn Greene, Rutgers University, USA
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Academic and Postgraduate
Illustrationen
1 s/w Abbildung, 1 s/w Photographie bzw. Rasterbild, 2 s/w Tabellen
2 Tables, black and white; 1 Halftones, black and white; 1 Illustrations, black and white
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-032-73075-2 (9781032730752)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Shaunak Sastry is Professor of Communication in the School of Communication, Film, & Media Studies and Provost's Fellow at the University of Cincinnati, USA. Dr. Sastry is the 2nd Vice-President of the National Communication Association (NCA). His award-winning health communication research has been funded by the National Institutes of Health, and he currently is Co-Principal Investigator and co-lead of the Community Engagement Core of the Cincinnati Center for Climate Change and Health. He is also a former senior editor of the journal Health Communication and sits on the editorial board of several leading academic journals.
Heather M. Zoller is a Professor in the School of Communication, Film, & Media Studies at the University of Cincinnati, USA. She is the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Applied Communication Research and former Senior Editor at Health Communication. She co-edited Emerging Perspectives in Health Communication: Meaning, Culture, & Power (Routledge, 2008) and recently served on the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine Committee on PPE with NIOSH.
Ambar Basu is a Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of South Florida, USA. He is a co-editor of Post-AIDS Discourse in Health Communication (Routledge, 2021). He has served as Senior Editor for Health Communication, and he co-edits a Routledge book series titled Critical Cultural Studies in Global Health Communication.
Herausgeber*in
University of South Florida, USA
1. From Symptoms to Transformation: Addressing the Root Causes of Hunger through Critical Health Communication 2. Reproductive Injustice, Feminicides, and the Intersections of Critical Health Communication and Journalism Praxis 3. God, country, and family: A risk orders theory approach to deconstructing health messages about family planning in the Latine community 4. Communicating Structural Violence: A Case Study of Entertainment Establishment Women Workers in Kathmandu, Nepal 5. Critical Pragmatism and the Politics of the Possible: Communicating for Critically Holistic Health in the Workplace and Beyond 6. HIV interventions, collectivization efforts, and citizenship on the margins of the state in India 7. Navigating the Terrain: Applying Critical Health Communication Methods to Participatory Action Praxis with Black Women Farmers 8. Biocriticism in a Time of Precarity: Inventional Resources for Critical Health Communication 9. Culture-centered Approach as Critical Health Practice: The Body as Resistance 10. Decolonizing Health Communication: Reflections on Critical Health Communication Research in Nigeria 11. Journeys in critical health communication: meditations on being/becoming CCA scholars 12. New Light: Critical Health Communication and Connections to Experiences from the Field