LOCAL AND GLOBAL PERCEPTIONS AND MEANINGS OF COVID-19
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Date
2026
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the Faculty of Communication and Media Studies, Delta State University, Abraka, Nigeria
Abstract
The outbreak of a strain of coronavirus in Wuhan,
China, in December 2019 was initially a local issue. However, the.
rapid spread of the disease in Hubei Province soon alerted the
Chinese government to an epidemic and prompted it to share its
concern with the world. By 11th January 2020, the World Health
Organisation (WHO) had publicised the scientific nomenclature of
the virus outbreak, COVID-19, and by January 2020, the epidemic
was pronounced a Public Health Emergency of International
Concern. The relentless spread of the virus, which met the
essential criteria of an infectious disease transmitted from one
human to another across a large geographic area and affecting a
significant number of the world's population, forced the WHO to
declare COVID-19 a pandemic on 11th March 2020. Since the
disease's declaration as a pandemic and the moral panic it sparked
worldwide, there was confusion over its scientific, spiritual, and
social meanings. In this chapter, we examine Africa's and global
perspectives on COVID-19 and their implications for individuals
and the societies in which they live and function. Within post-.
structuralism and postmodemity, we examine how meanings are
attached to the virus and how its interpretation influences
behaviour, especially within governments' extreme measures to
curtail the virus outbreak in Nigeria and worldwide. We also
examine how COVID-19, as a health symbol, assumes different
shades of meaning as individuals perceive risk across different
socio-cultural, spiritual, and political contexts.
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Keywords
Local, Global, Perception, Meaning, COVID-19, Social, Cultural, Political, SpirituaVReligious