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    Contagion went viral: microbiology, entertainment media and the public understanding of science

    Chambers, Amy ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3801-3582 (2023) Contagion went viral: microbiology, entertainment media and the public understanding of science. Current Clinical Microbiology Reports, 10 (3). pp. 152-160. ISSN 2196-5471

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    Abstract

    Purpose of review (research questions): How has the COVID-19 pandemic influenced how movies are used in public heath crises? What made Contagion (2011) the key example? Why is it important for scientists to understand the role of entertainment media on public understanding of science (PUS)? Recent findings: Microbiology on the Hollywood screen - and in particular the way we talk about pandemics - has changed since COVID-19 hit. Imagined futures of the end of humanity have taken on a renewed relevance. The pandemic has inspired writers across a number of science/medical humanities fields to explore PUS and public pandemic preparedness. Summary: Microbiology movies like Contagion became valuable sources of distraction and information. Their apparent accuracy and authenticity was because of the scientists. Contagion caught the public imagination because of its investment in representing the realities of science that offered a pathway through the pandemic instead of another dead (at the) end dystopian disaster.

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