Il dibattito degli esperti sul Covid-19: sintomi di decivilizzazione

In this study we use the Covid-19 pandemic as a revealing case of some emerging dynamics in techno-scientific controversies, opening a dialogue between the STS tradition and Norbert Elias’ theoretical reflection, in particular on the processes of “civilization” and “decivilization”. Our theoretical...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giuseppe Tipaldo, Sara Rocutto, Carlotta Merlo, Fabio Bruno
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rosenberg & Sellier 2022-07-01
Series:Quaderni di Sociologia
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/qds/4976
_version_ 1797309188442947584
author Giuseppe Tipaldo
Sara Rocutto
Carlotta Merlo
Fabio Bruno
author_facet Giuseppe Tipaldo
Sara Rocutto
Carlotta Merlo
Fabio Bruno
author_sort Giuseppe Tipaldo
collection DOAJ
description In this study we use the Covid-19 pandemic as a revealing case of some emerging dynamics in techno-scientific controversies, opening a dialogue between the STS tradition and Norbert Elias’ theoretical reflection, in particular on the processes of “civilization” and “decivilization”. Our theoretical model is empirically examined by means of a CATA (Computer-Assisted Text Analysis), carried out from data generated by public pages and active users on Facebook Italy in the period January 2020-July 2021 (texts N > 5.5 million) and, to a lesser extent, other media sources (transcripts of TV debates, newspaper interviews, Instagram and Twitter).The analysis shows, first of all, that it is precisely at moments of greatest media interest and on topics where confrontation becomes more acute that the representation of ‘expert’ knowledge reaches the highest peaks of popularity on Facebook. In addition, most of the episodes examined take the form of interdisciplinary conflict, i.e. they function as a rhetorical device operated by members of boundary-pushing scientific disciplines who are in conflict with each other. The competition is not without personal attacks and fallacies of argumentation, even when the debaters are representatives of so-called ‘official’ science. With regard to the effects on the public, traces of hate speech were found in almost a quarter of the comments generated by users: these are accompanied by polarized positions around the pandemic and the ‘experts’, as well as conspiratorial readings of the events. A small but not unnoticeable proportion of the texts manifest cognitive discomfort due to the information overload generated by the personalization of experts who attack and deny each other.We call for more research to understand whether the observed dynamics will consolidate, over time, into a lasting process of decivilization.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T01:22:37Z
format Article
id doaj.art-0a453d5f894444b0a2e5ea01d4e647d0
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 0033-4952
2421-5848
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T01:22:37Z
publishDate 2022-07-01
publisher Rosenberg & Sellier
record_format Article
series Quaderni di Sociologia
spelling doaj.art-0a453d5f894444b0a2e5ea01d4e647d02024-02-14T14:21:56ZengRosenberg & SellierQuaderni di Sociologia0033-49522421-58482022-07-018966478110.4000/qds.4976Il dibattito degli esperti sul Covid-19: sintomi di decivilizzazioneGiuseppe TipaldoSara RocuttoCarlotta MerloFabio BrunoIn this study we use the Covid-19 pandemic as a revealing case of some emerging dynamics in techno-scientific controversies, opening a dialogue between the STS tradition and Norbert Elias’ theoretical reflection, in particular on the processes of “civilization” and “decivilization”. Our theoretical model is empirically examined by means of a CATA (Computer-Assisted Text Analysis), carried out from data generated by public pages and active users on Facebook Italy in the period January 2020-July 2021 (texts N > 5.5 million) and, to a lesser extent, other media sources (transcripts of TV debates, newspaper interviews, Instagram and Twitter).The analysis shows, first of all, that it is precisely at moments of greatest media interest and on topics where confrontation becomes more acute that the representation of ‘expert’ knowledge reaches the highest peaks of popularity on Facebook. In addition, most of the episodes examined take the form of interdisciplinary conflict, i.e. they function as a rhetorical device operated by members of boundary-pushing scientific disciplines who are in conflict with each other. The competition is not without personal attacks and fallacies of argumentation, even when the debaters are representatives of so-called ‘official’ science. With regard to the effects on the public, traces of hate speech were found in almost a quarter of the comments generated by users: these are accompanied by polarized positions around the pandemic and the ‘experts’, as well as conspiratorial readings of the events. A small but not unnoticeable proportion of the texts manifest cognitive discomfort due to the information overload generated by the personalization of experts who attack and deny each other.We call for more research to understand whether the observed dynamics will consolidate, over time, into a lasting process of decivilization.https://journals.openedition.org/qds/4976
spellingShingle Giuseppe Tipaldo
Sara Rocutto
Carlotta Merlo
Fabio Bruno
Il dibattito degli esperti sul Covid-19: sintomi di decivilizzazione
Quaderni di Sociologia
title Il dibattito degli esperti sul Covid-19: sintomi di decivilizzazione
title_full Il dibattito degli esperti sul Covid-19: sintomi di decivilizzazione
title_fullStr Il dibattito degli esperti sul Covid-19: sintomi di decivilizzazione
title_full_unstemmed Il dibattito degli esperti sul Covid-19: sintomi di decivilizzazione
title_short Il dibattito degli esperti sul Covid-19: sintomi di decivilizzazione
title_sort il dibattito degli esperti sul covid 19 sintomi di decivilizzazione
url https://journals.openedition.org/qds/4976
work_keys_str_mv AT giuseppetipaldo ildibattitodegliespertisulcovid19sintomididecivilizzazione
AT sararocutto ildibattitodegliespertisulcovid19sintomididecivilizzazione
AT carlottamerlo ildibattitodegliespertisulcovid19sintomididecivilizzazione
AT fabiobruno ildibattitodegliespertisulcovid19sintomididecivilizzazione