COVID-19 vaccine conspiracy theories, discourses of liberty, and “the new normal” on social media

McGlashan, Mark and Clarke, Isobelle and Gee, Matt and Grieshofer, Tatiana and Kehoe, Andrew and Lawson, Robert (2025) COVID-19 vaccine conspiracy theories, discourses of liberty, and “the new normal” on social media. Linguistics Vanguard. ISSN 2199-174X

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Abstract

Public distrust in government, pharmaceutical companies, healthcare professions, and medical science and technology has been consistently linked with vaccine rejection. Policymakers, therefore, want to better understand links between distrust of institutions and vaccine refusal. This paper reports on a case study of posts (tweets) to the social media platform Twitter (now X) collected as part of the TRAC:COVID (Trust and Communication: A Coronavirus Online Visual Dashboard) project. The TRAC:COVID dashboard combines methods from corpus linguistics with various visualization techniques to enable users to explore approximately 84 million posts containing reference to COVID-19 published between 1 January 2020 and 30 April 2021 (encompassing the dates of UK coronavirus lockdowns). The dashboard and all sampling considerations (including an overview of the detailed search query used) are available at https://www.traccovid.com . Specifically, the paper analyses a subsample of posts that make reference to vaccines and contain at least one hashtag relating to various categories of dis/misinformation. By employing keyword co-occurrence analysis – a method for examining statistically significant keywords using multiple correspondence analysis – we find that these posts draw on various “discourses of liberty” to protest against perceived infringements on “health freedoms” through the imposition of new norms of behaviour (e.g., mask-wearing).

Item Type: Article
Identification Number: 10.1515/lingvan-2024-0121
Dates:
Date
Event
5 February 2025
Accepted
11 March 2025
Published Online
Uncontrolled Keywords: COVID-19, conspiracy theories, fake news, keyword co-occurrence analysis, vaccine hesitancy
Subjects: CAH19 - language and area studies > CAH19-01 - English studies > CAH19-01-07 - linguistics
Divisions: Faculty of Arts, Design and Media > College of English and Media
Depositing User: Gemma Tonks
Date Deposited: 25 Mar 2025 14:00
Last Modified: 25 Mar 2025 14:00
URI: https://www.open-access.bcu.ac.uk/id/eprint/16263

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