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Women Will Get Cancer: Visual and Verbal Presence (And Absence) in a Pharmaceutical Advertising Campaign About HPV

Women Will Get Cancer: Visual and Verbal Presence (And Absence) in a Pharmaceutical Advertising... In 2006, Merck global pharmaceutical company launched a “Tell Someone” direct-to-consumer advertising campaign to educate about the human papillomavirus (HPV). Through a visual and verbal analysis of presence and absence in two videos from this campaign that aired across major U.S. television networks and online in spring 2006, I illustrate how Merck's campaign problematically argues that women will get cancer. Specifically, the videos visually and verbally make present middle-to-upper-middle class adult women as the only people who contract HPV, amplify the equation that HPV equals cancer, and advocate a limited course of health prevention under the guise of a “public health campaign” that has a mission of “education.” These techniques of presence make Merck's argument stand out among the proliferation and plethora of images circulating through current U.S. mass media but at the cost of accentuating women's bodies as inherently diseased. This study has implications for women's health, pharmaceutical advertising, and the growing conversation in the field of visual argumentation about the attention and distraction of audiences. I also propose an improved video for a public health campaign about HPV. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Argumentation and Advocacy Taylor & Francis

Women Will Get Cancer: Visual and Verbal Presence (And Absence) in a Pharmaceutical Advertising Campaign About HPV

Argumentation and Advocacy , Volume 48 (1): 16 – Jun 1, 2011

Women Will Get Cancer: Visual and Verbal Presence (And Absence) in a Pharmaceutical Advertising Campaign About HPV

Abstract

In 2006, Merck global pharmaceutical company launched a “Tell Someone” direct-to-consumer advertising campaign to educate about the human papillomavirus (HPV). Through a visual and verbal analysis of presence and absence in two videos from this campaign that aired across major U.S. television networks and online in spring 2006, I illustrate how Merck's campaign problematically argues that women will get cancer. Specifically, the videos visually and verbally make present...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2011 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
2576-8476
eISSN
1051-1431
DOI
10.1080/00028533.2011.11821753
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

In 2006, Merck global pharmaceutical company launched a “Tell Someone” direct-to-consumer advertising campaign to educate about the human papillomavirus (HPV). Through a visual and verbal analysis of presence and absence in two videos from this campaign that aired across major U.S. television networks and online in spring 2006, I illustrate how Merck's campaign problematically argues that women will get cancer. Specifically, the videos visually and verbally make present middle-to-upper-middle class adult women as the only people who contract HPV, amplify the equation that HPV equals cancer, and advocate a limited course of health prevention under the guise of a “public health campaign” that has a mission of “education.” These techniques of presence make Merck's argument stand out among the proliferation and plethora of images circulating through current U.S. mass media but at the cost of accentuating women's bodies as inherently diseased. This study has implications for women's health, pharmaceutical advertising, and the growing conversation in the field of visual argumentation about the attention and distraction of audiences. I also propose an improved video for a public health campaign about HPV.

Journal

Argumentation and AdvocacyTaylor & Francis

Published: Jun 1, 2011

Keywords: presence; visual argumentation; visual rhetoric; public health; cervical cancer

References