TY - JOUR
T1 - ‘Mask must wear at all times’: top-down and bottom-up multilingual COVID-scape in Hong Kong as a prime site of epidemiological and public health knowledge (re)construction during the COVID-19 pandemic
AU - Gu, Chonglong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2023/7/12
Y1 - 2023/7/12
N2 - The Covid-19 pandemic brings to the fore language's primacy in crisis communication. Given our diverse world, how effectively vital information is conveyed multilingually may make or break a place’s anti-Covid battle. In the study, a locale’s Covid-related multilingual landscape (multilingual Covidscape) is conceptualised as a prime multilingual/mediated site of epidemiological and public health knowledge (re)construction, where pandemic-related information is (re)contextualised and communicated multilingually by various agents (including translators). A former British colony and global financial centre, China’s Hong Kong SAR represents a most cosmopolitan and diverse place in Asia, constituting a fertile ground for linguistic landscape (LL) research. Drawing on real-world data, this study explores the multilingual practices enacted in Hong Kong’s multilingual Covidscape. This interdisciplinary study illustrates how multilingual resources and repertoires are brought to bear in a global city’s pandemic communication. Beyond the traditionally ‘choreographed’ LL in Chinese and English, various multilingual practices are discussed at multiple levels.
AB - The Covid-19 pandemic brings to the fore language's primacy in crisis communication. Given our diverse world, how effectively vital information is conveyed multilingually may make or break a place’s anti-Covid battle. In the study, a locale’s Covid-related multilingual landscape (multilingual Covidscape) is conceptualised as a prime multilingual/mediated site of epidemiological and public health knowledge (re)construction, where pandemic-related information is (re)contextualised and communicated multilingually by various agents (including translators). A former British colony and global financial centre, China’s Hong Kong SAR represents a most cosmopolitan and diverse place in Asia, constituting a fertile ground for linguistic landscape (LL) research. Drawing on real-world data, this study explores the multilingual practices enacted in Hong Kong’s multilingual Covidscape. This interdisciplinary study illustrates how multilingual resources and repertoires are brought to bear in a global city’s pandemic communication. Beyond the traditionally ‘choreographed’ LL in Chinese and English, various multilingual practices are discussed at multiple levels.
KW - COVID-19
KW - linguistic landscape
KW - Covidscape
KW - Hong Kong
KW - multilingual crisis communication
KW - public health communication
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85164801537&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14708477.2023.2225483
DO - 10.1080/14708477.2023.2225483
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1470-8477
JO - Language and Intercultural Communication
JF - Language and Intercultural Communication
ER -