Collective symbolic coping with new technology: Knowledge, images and public discourse
Authors: Wagner W.1; Kronberger N.2; Seifert F.3
Source: British Journal of Social Psychology, Volume 41, Number 3, September 2002 , pp. 323-343(21)
Publisher: British Psychological Society
Abstract:
Using data from policy analyses, media analyses and a European-wide survey about public perceptions of biotechnology conducted in 1996 and again in 1999, it is shown how a country's public develops an everyday understanding of a new technology (genetic modification) construed as potentially harmful by the media. To understand the reliance on images and related beliefs, we propose a theory of collective symbolic coping. It identifies four steps: first, the creation of awareness; second, production of divergent images; third, convergence upon a couple of dominant images in the public sphere; fourth, normalization. It is suggested that symbolic coping occurs in countries where a recent increase in policy activity and of media reporting has alerted the public; that this public show a high proportion of beliefs in menacing images; that these beliefs are relatively independent of pre-existing popular science knowledge; and that they are functionally equivalent to scientific knowledge in providing judgmental confidence and reducing self-ascribed ignorance. These propositions are shown to be true in Austria and Greece. Several implications of the theory are discussed, including social representation theory and public understanding of science.Document Type: Research article
Affiliations: 1: Johannes Kepler Universität, Linz, Austria 2: Johannes Kepler Universita¨t, Linz, Austria 3: O¨sterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna, Austria

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