Best Laid Plans: Cultural Entropy and the Unraveling of AIDS Media Campaigns

Best Laid Plans: Cultural Entropy and the Unraveling of AIDS Media Campaigns
ISBN-10
022638215X
ISBN-13
9780226382159
Series
Best Laid Plans
Category
History
Pages
268
Language
English
Published
2016-08-18
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Author
Terence E. McDonnell

Description

McDonnell here offers some startling new ways to think about propaganda, specifically about health campaigns. He uses HIV/AIDS media campaigns in Ghana as his case, laying out efforts to control and organize how local communities make sense of the disease. Using media to change people’s sexual practices involves evidence-based design, opinion leaders in the design process, and getting all organizations behind a single message. But these campaigns hardly ever work. Why? They are subject to cultural misfires: they are disrupted by misinterpretation and misuse. Enter "cultural entropy”--this concept identifies a process through which intended meanings and uses of propaganda (and other cultural objects) fracture into alternative meanings, new practices, failed interactions, and blatant disregard. The book shows with exquisite ethnographic details how the AIDS media campaigns succumb to cultural entropy: e.g., how people turn female condoms into bracelets, AIDS posters go missing from public postings and become home décor, and red ribbons fade into pink ribbons under the sun. Cultural entropy is a disruption process that affects things as well as symbols. Cultural entropy offers a new explanation for the failure of AIDS campaigns specifically and modern interventions broadly.

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