Viral Denial: Pandemics, Chiropractic, and the Persuasive Power of Invisibility

Abstract

While Louis Pasteur’s germ theory functions as one of the foundational concepts of modern medicine, resistance to COVID-19 prevention measures reveal a rejection not just of government mandates, but of germ theory as well. Therefore, this article seeks to trace the rhetorical linear of rejections of germ theory denialism through an examination of primary and secondary texts from Pasteur’s contemporaries, through the development of chiropractic, and into the COVID-19 pandemic. The author finds that the denial of viruses offers a peculiar form of biorhetoric that invokes absence and invisibility, rather than presence, as rhetorical grounds for rejecting public health directives.

Keywords

presence, absence, chiropractic, denialism, germ theory, biorhetoric, absence, chiropractic, biorhetoric, germ theory denialism, invisibility, COVID-19

How to Cite

Crowe, J. H., (2024) “Viral Denial: Pandemics, Chiropractic, and the Persuasive Power of Invisibility”, POROI 18(2). doi: https://doi.org/10.17077/2151-2957.31809

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Authors

Julie Homchick Crowe (Seattle University)

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CC BY-NC 4.0

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This article has been peer reviewed.

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