Journal article 41 views
Health Crisis Racism and MedicalScapegoating: Media Representation of Chinese and Asian Ethnicity During COVID-19 in the UK
Journal of Language and Discrimination, Volume: 10, Issue: 1, Pages: 51 - 76
Swansea University Authors:
Yan Wu , Matthew Wall
, Jun Yang
Full text not available from this repository: check for access using links below.
DOI (Published version): https://doi.org/10.3138/jld-2024-0016
Abstract
Public health crises caused by infectious diseases have long been racially charged in Western countries, frequently functioning as vectors for the stigmatisation and othering of ethnic minorities. During the COVID-19 pandemic, a surge of Sinophobic sentiment and violence against Chinese and East and...
| Published in: | Journal of Language and Discrimination |
|---|---|
| Published: |
University of Toronto Press
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| URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa71875 |
| first_indexed |
2026-05-11T10:16:24Z |
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| last_indexed |
2026-05-12T08:38:25Z |
| id |
cronfa71875 |
| recordtype |
SURis |
| fullrecord |
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2026-05-11T11:18:56.3653679 v2 71875 2026-05-11 Health Crisis Racism and MedicalScapegoating: Media Representation of Chinese and Asian Ethnicity During COVID-19 in the UK fcb0b08dd7afa00f6899a02d4cb66fff 0000-0002-5741-6862 Yan Wu Yan Wu true false 22914658d586a5759d4d4b945ea140bd 0000-0001-8265-4910 Matthew Wall Matthew Wall true false 97bd77e98c19f4447cbacbebe2b8f108 0000-0002-0004-0956 Jun Yang Jun Yang true false 2026-05-11 CACS Public health crises caused by infectious diseases have long been racially charged in Western countries, frequently functioning as vectors for the stigmatisation and othering of ethnic minorities. During the COVID-19 pandemic, a surge of Sinophobic sentiment and violence against Chinese and East and Southeast Asian (ESEA) communities brought renewed attention to these dynamics. Although communication scholarship has examined overtly racialised news framings in the United States, the United Kingdom remains comparatively underexplored. This is because British political and mainstream media discourse appeared to reject explicit racialisation of the virus at large. In this paper, we argue that a subtle yet consequential form of cultural racism is detected in press coverage and is responsible for the reproduction of “othering” logics, negative evaluations, and elite level scapegoating of minority communities for public health mismanagement. Employing corpus-assisted critical discourse analysis, this study examines UK press coverage of Chinese and ESEA communities across 14 newspapers and online outlets. The time frame for the study was from 29 January 2020, when the first two COVID-19 cases were reported in the United Kingdom, to 21 February 2022, when all COVID-19 restrictions were lifted. The findings demonstrate that medical scapegoating operates in the UK media context through subtle narrative strategies. Our study advances scholarly understanding of racism in media representation by proposing a new concept of public health crisis racism, which shapes media narratives and functions to construct a positive self-image for the majority population and to unite social groups against ethnic minorities as “others.” Journal Article Journal of Language and Discrimination 10 1 51 76 University of Toronto Press Chinese, COVID-19, East and Southeast Asian, health crisis racism, media representation, medical scapegoating 0 0 0 0001-01-01 https://doi.org/10.3138/jld-2024-0016 COLLEGE NANME Culture and Communications School COLLEGE CODE CACS Swansea University 2026-05-11T11:18:56.3653679 2026-05-11T11:06:25.6603203 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - Modern Languages, Translation, and Interpreting Yan Wu 0000-0002-5741-6862 1 Matthew Wall 0000-0001-8265-4910 2 Xin Zhao https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6853-7224 3 Jun Yang 0000-0002-0004-0956 4 |
| title |
Health Crisis Racism and MedicalScapegoating: Media Representation of Chinese and Asian Ethnicity During COVID-19 in the UK |
| spellingShingle |
Health Crisis Racism and MedicalScapegoating: Media Representation of Chinese and Asian Ethnicity During COVID-19 in the UK Yan Wu Matthew Wall Jun Yang |
| title_short |
Health Crisis Racism and MedicalScapegoating: Media Representation of Chinese and Asian Ethnicity During COVID-19 in the UK |
| title_full |
Health Crisis Racism and MedicalScapegoating: Media Representation of Chinese and Asian Ethnicity During COVID-19 in the UK |
| title_fullStr |
Health Crisis Racism and MedicalScapegoating: Media Representation of Chinese and Asian Ethnicity During COVID-19 in the UK |
| title_full_unstemmed |
Health Crisis Racism and MedicalScapegoating: Media Representation of Chinese and Asian Ethnicity During COVID-19 in the UK |
| title_sort |
Health Crisis Racism and MedicalScapegoating: Media Representation of Chinese and Asian Ethnicity During COVID-19 in the UK |
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fcb0b08dd7afa00f6899a02d4cb66fff 22914658d586a5759d4d4b945ea140bd 97bd77e98c19f4447cbacbebe2b8f108 |
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fcb0b08dd7afa00f6899a02d4cb66fff_***_Yan Wu 22914658d586a5759d4d4b945ea140bd_***_Matthew Wall 97bd77e98c19f4447cbacbebe2b8f108_***_Jun Yang |
| author |
Yan Wu Matthew Wall Jun Yang |
| author2 |
Yan Wu Matthew Wall Xin Zhao Jun Yang |
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Journal of Language and Discrimination |
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51 |
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Swansea University |
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https://doi.org/10.3138/jld-2024-0016 |
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University of Toronto Press |
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Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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Public health crises caused by infectious diseases have long been racially charged in Western countries, frequently functioning as vectors for the stigmatisation and othering of ethnic minorities. During the COVID-19 pandemic, a surge of Sinophobic sentiment and violence against Chinese and East and Southeast Asian (ESEA) communities brought renewed attention to these dynamics. Although communication scholarship has examined overtly racialised news framings in the United States, the United Kingdom remains comparatively underexplored. This is because British political and mainstream media discourse appeared to reject explicit racialisation of the virus at large. In this paper, we argue that a subtle yet consequential form of cultural racism is detected in press coverage and is responsible for the reproduction of “othering” logics, negative evaluations, and elite level scapegoating of minority communities for public health mismanagement. Employing corpus-assisted critical discourse analysis, this study examines UK press coverage of Chinese and ESEA communities across 14 newspapers and online outlets. The time frame for the study was from 29 January 2020, when the first two COVID-19 cases were reported in the United Kingdom, to 21 February 2022, when all COVID-19 restrictions were lifted. The findings demonstrate that medical scapegoating operates in the UK media context through subtle narrative strategies. Our study advances scholarly understanding of racism in media representation by proposing a new concept of public health crisis racism, which shapes media narratives and functions to construct a positive self-image for the majority population and to unite social groups against ethnic minorities as “others.” |
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0001-01-01T06:41:53Z |
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11.106 |

