Culture, meaning and disability: Injury prevention campaigns and the production of stigma
References (57)
- et al.
Relationships with severely disabled people: the social construction of humanness
Soc. Problems
(1989) Social networks and social support: an overview of research, practice, and policy implications
Hlth Educ. Q.
(1985)Time
(14 May 1990)Encoding and decoding in the television discourse
(1973)Culture and Education
(1974)- et al.
Popular culture
Ann. Rev. Sociol.
(1986) The new validation of popular culture: sense and sentimentality in academia
Critical Stud. Mass Commun.
(1987)The politics of Alzheimer's disease: a case study in apocalyptic demography
Int. J. Hlth Services
(1990)Injury in America
(1985)- et al.
Cost of Injury in the United States: A Report to Congress
(1989) United States Population Estimates by Age, Sex, and Race—1980 to 1987
(1988)
Impaired view: television portrayal of handicapped people
Pity and fear: images of the disabled in literature and the popular arts
Proc. Literary Symp.
Missing Pieces: A Chronicle of Living with a Disability
The Body Silent
With Wings: An Anthology
Physical disability and social liminality: a study in the rituals of adversity
Soc. Sci. Med.
Ordinary Lives: Voices of Disability and Disease
Long-term impact of injury on individuals, families, and society: personal narratives and policy implications
Disabling Professions
Embodied knowledge: the message in the bottle
Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association Meetings
Dissent from the report of the committee
The Aging Enterprise
Gold in gray: reflections on business' discovery of the elderly market
The Gerontologist
The Fiscal Crisis of the State
LEAR'S magazine “for the woman who wasn't born yesterday”: a critical review
The Gerontologist
Media sociology: the dominant paradigm
Theory and Society
Public health as social justice
Cited by (54)
Beyond awareness: Towards a critically conscious health promotion for rheumatic fever in Aotearoa, New Zealand
2020, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :Yet families whose child had developed RF were left dealing with the messaging's implication that they did something wrong. In the same way that Wang (1992) suggests injury prevention campaigns stigmatise those who have been injured—the disabled—the RF campaign stigmatises parents whose child developed RF by implying they did not take action to prevent the disease. This internalising of blame was modelled in the advertising campaigns, where a mother of a boy who developed RF wipes tears from her eyes as she berates herself for not taking her son to the doctor (Fig. 2).
Fifty years of sociological leadership at Social Science and Medicine
2018, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :For example, a common icon of injury prevention campaigns is to portray a person in a wheelchair as the outcome to be avoided. In the name of prevention, disability becomes politicized as an unacceptable and preventable risk (Wang, 1992). The concern about whether public health could adopt stigmatization as a population health strategy was debated in a special issue of Social Science & Medicine devoted to Stigma, Prejudice, Discrimination, and Health.
Exemplification in news narratives: stigmatizing and securitizing effects
2024, Frontiers in CommunicationOnline misinformation and everyday ontological narratives of social distinction
2023, Media, Culture and Society