Disinformation and memetics: replication and mutation of antivaccine arguments in informative content

Keywords: memetics, fake news, disinformation, anti-vaccine, Covid-19

Abstract

Disinformation about vaccination is as old as the origin of the vaccines that emerged at the end of the 18th century, its reach is transnational and it has posed a challenge not only to the information landscape, but also to public health, especially during the Covid-19 pandemic. Although the fake news spread by anti-vaccine advocates was disproved during prior epidemics, the old anti-vaccine ideas were resurrected in a hypermedia digital ecosystem that multiplied the replication of disinformation, especially during the pandemic. This paper aims to determine whether there are memetic characteristics in the disinformation disseminated by contemporary anti-vaccine advocates in a sample of disinformation content from both the nineteenth century and the present day. First, the origin of the anti-vaccine movement is documented. Next, formats and means of dissemination of disinformation from its origins to Covid-19 are described. Finally, anti-vaccine arguments from the 19th century are extracted and compared to current ones by applying Dawkins' memetic theory. This study finds that current anti-vaccine ideas contain memetic characteristics of 19th century arguments that have been replicated in fake news, hoaxes, social networks and billboards, resurrecting a disinformation that has eroded the credibility of vaccination. Specifically, the anti-vaccine argument is long-lived, because it persists with similar ideas today, particularly fruitful due to the capacity of replication offered by interactive digital media, but less reliable, because anti-vaccine ideas have mutated adapting to the current social context.

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Published
2024-07-16
How to Cite
Sánchez-Olmos C., Rodríguez-Ferrándiz R. y Hidalgo Marí T. (2024). Disinformation and memetics: replication and mutation of antivaccine arguments in informative content. Cuadernos de Documentación Multimedia, 35, e95574. https://doi.org/10.5209/cdmu.95574
Section
Articles