Beyond the military metaphor

Título

Beyond the military metaphor

Autor

Iona Francesca Walker

Descripción

Military metaphors shape the limits and possibilities for conceptualising and responding to complex challenges of contagion. Although they are effective at communicating risk and urgency and at mobilising resources, military metaphors collapse diverse interests and communities into ‘fronts’, obscure alternative responses, and promote human exceptionalism. In this article, I draw from criticisms of the use of military metaphor in scientific and policy descriptions of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) over the past sixty years on order to compare with and explore the use of military metaphors in descriptions of the COVID-19 pandemic. As AMR research has recognised the importance of symbiotic human–microbe relationships and new areas of interdisciplinary collaboration in recent years, a corresponding decline in the use of military metaphor in scientific discourse has begun to emerge. I ask how the legacy of the military metaphor in AMR research can offer lessons regarding or alternatives to the martial language currently saturating responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK.

Fecha

2020

Materia

covid-19, Metaphor, antimicrobial resistance, Multispecies ethnography, human-microbe relationships

Identificador

10.17157/mat.7.2.806

Fuente

Epidemiology and Health

Editor

Korean Society of Epidemiology

Cobertura

Medicine (General), Anthropology

Archivos

https://socictopen.socict.org/files/to_import/pdfs/d15b1c2cb74c8c5e64109103812c1c02.pdf

Colección

Citación

Iona Francesca Walker, “Beyond the military metaphor,” SOCICT Open, consulta 20 de abril de 2026, https://socictopen.socict.org/items/show/6523.

Formatos de Salida

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