We Can Be Heroes Identification, Superheroes, and the Visual Communication of Agency in Online Children’s Books about COVID-19

Main Article Content

Kristin Kondrlik
Cara Byrne

Abstract

Children, as a result of age, social status, and developmental stage, depend upon caregivers and medical professionals to interpret health discourse. However, children have largely gone unexamined in research on visual health communication. Because children are a vulnerable audience, rhetoricians should more closely attend to texts addressing them. This article analyzes 147 children’s picture books about COVID-19. These texts draw on the rhetorical concept of identification to encourage readers to take up particular health behaviors. These texts illuminate three specific risks of using identification to instantiate health behaviors in children: failing to acknowledge material limitations on children’s agency, glossing over the risks of infection, and distorting scientific discourse. Ultimately, while the majority of the texts in our corpus articulate the need for a community-centered approach, only a handful acknowledge directly that children’s agency and power are limited. These texts, therefore, also highlight a larger issue beyond the coronavirus: the difficulty of relying on an individual health imperative in communicating public health—an inherently communal enterprise.

Article Details

Section
Research Articles
Author Biographies

Kristin Kondrlik, West Chester University of Pennsylvania

Kristin Kondrlik is an Associate Professor of English and co-chair of the Professional and Technical Writing minor at West Chester University of Pennsylvania. Her current research focuses on the intersections of infectious disease, public health rhetorics and communication, and print culture. Her scholarship has appeared in Poroi: Project on Rhetoric of Inquiry, Victorian Periodicals Review, and English Literature in Transition: 1880-1920. She also co-edited Veg(etari)an Arguments in Culture, History, and Practice, published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2020.

Cara Byrne, Case Western Reserve University

Cara Byrne is a full-time lecturer in the Department of English and the Research Advisor on Diverse Children's Literature for the Schubert Center for Child Studies at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. She has published articles in ImageTexT, Children’s Literature Association Quarterly, and The Bloomsbury Handbook to Edwidge Danticat.

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