Social Representations of the Coronavirus at the Beginning of the Pandemic in Russia

The coronavirus outbreak is a global event that has bypassed national borders and affected the entire world. Therefore, examining social representations of can reveal the problems that structure peoples experiences in a particular social context. To identify social representations of the coronavirus...

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Main Authors: Aleksandr I. Dontsov, Olga Yu. Zotova, Lyudmila V. Tarasova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2021-12-01
Series:RUDN Journal of Psychology and Pedagogics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.rudn.ru/psychology-pedagogics/article/viewFile/26913/19590
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spelling doaj-0924522df0864f8fb29eac3ed49d18582021-07-01T18:48:51ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)RUDN Journal of Psychology and Pedagogics2313-16832313-17052021-12-0118242244410.22363/2313-1683-2021-18-2-422-44420258Social Representations of the Coronavirus at the Beginning of the Pandemic in RussiaAleksandr I. Dontsov0Olga Yu. Zotova1Lyudmila V. Tarasova2Lomonosov Moscow State UniversityLiberal Arts University - University for HumanitiesLiberal Arts University - University for HumanitiesThe coronavirus outbreak is a global event that has bypassed national borders and affected the entire world. Therefore, examining social representations of can reveal the problems that structure peoples experiences in a particular social context. To identify social representations of the coronavirus, the authors conducted a survey within the territory of the Sverdlovsk region. The survey covered the period from March 11 to May 11, 2020. The data were collected in two stages: at the first stage, there were 31 confirmed cases of COVID-19 infection in Russia, but no cases had yet been recorded in the Sverdlovsk region; at the second stage, the number of cases reached 1952 in the Sverdlovsk region and 221 344 throughout the country. The study used the word association tests, The Semantic Differential Scale (V.F. Petrenko), The Psychic Activation Assessment Methodology (L.A. Kurgan and T.A. Nemchin) and the questionnaire survey techniques. The findings showed that the significance of the coronavirus problem for the respondents varied in different periods of the pandemic. The core of the social representation is sustainable and coherent. It reflects the results of the media impact: death, panic. It also remains stable regardless of the time and involvement of the respondents in the pandemic. The potential alteration zone serves as a kind of taming of knowledge about the coronavirus, the operationalization of the coronavirus perception content into the language of changes in a persons everyday life - the coronavirus pandemic is understood as a flu epidemic and the need for self-isolation is a vacation, an opportunity to stay at home. Observation of the immediate affective reaction of the respondents to the trigger coronavirus uncovered the presence of emotional tension and the prevalence of negative experiences in them. The survey also showed that in the pandemic, being the main source of information and a means of communication, the media set trends for developing perceptions.http://journals.rudn.ru/psychology-pedagogics/article/viewFile/26913/19590covid-19social representationsstate of securityisolationthe pandemicemotional state
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aleksandr I. Dontsov
Olga Yu. Zotova
Lyudmila V. Tarasova
spellingShingle Aleksandr I. Dontsov
Olga Yu. Zotova
Lyudmila V. Tarasova
Social Representations of the Coronavirus at the Beginning of the Pandemic in Russia
RUDN Journal of Psychology and Pedagogics
covid-19
social representations
state of security
isolation
the pandemic
emotional state
author_facet Aleksandr I. Dontsov
Olga Yu. Zotova
Lyudmila V. Tarasova
author_sort Aleksandr I. Dontsov
title Social Representations of the Coronavirus at the Beginning of the Pandemic in Russia
title_short Social Representations of the Coronavirus at the Beginning of the Pandemic in Russia
title_full Social Representations of the Coronavirus at the Beginning of the Pandemic in Russia
title_fullStr Social Representations of the Coronavirus at the Beginning of the Pandemic in Russia
title_full_unstemmed Social Representations of the Coronavirus at the Beginning of the Pandemic in Russia
title_sort social representations of the coronavirus at the beginning of the pandemic in russia
publisher Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
series RUDN Journal of Psychology and Pedagogics
issn 2313-1683
2313-1705
publishDate 2021-12-01
description The coronavirus outbreak is a global event that has bypassed national borders and affected the entire world. Therefore, examining social representations of can reveal the problems that structure peoples experiences in a particular social context. To identify social representations of the coronavirus, the authors conducted a survey within the territory of the Sverdlovsk region. The survey covered the period from March 11 to May 11, 2020. The data were collected in two stages: at the first stage, there were 31 confirmed cases of COVID-19 infection in Russia, but no cases had yet been recorded in the Sverdlovsk region; at the second stage, the number of cases reached 1952 in the Sverdlovsk region and 221 344 throughout the country. The study used the word association tests, The Semantic Differential Scale (V.F. Petrenko), The Psychic Activation Assessment Methodology (L.A. Kurgan and T.A. Nemchin) and the questionnaire survey techniques. The findings showed that the significance of the coronavirus problem for the respondents varied in different periods of the pandemic. The core of the social representation is sustainable and coherent. It reflects the results of the media impact: death, panic. It also remains stable regardless of the time and involvement of the respondents in the pandemic. The potential alteration zone serves as a kind of taming of knowledge about the coronavirus, the operationalization of the coronavirus perception content into the language of changes in a persons everyday life - the coronavirus pandemic is understood as a flu epidemic and the need for self-isolation is a vacation, an opportunity to stay at home. Observation of the immediate affective reaction of the respondents to the trigger coronavirus uncovered the presence of emotional tension and the prevalence of negative experiences in them. The survey also showed that in the pandemic, being the main source of information and a means of communication, the media set trends for developing perceptions.
topic covid-19
social representations
state of security
isolation
the pandemic
emotional state
url http://journals.rudn.ru/psychology-pedagogics/article/viewFile/26913/19590
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