Litcius/Paper detail

Face Masks: Their History and the Values They Communicate

John David Ike, Henry Bayerle, Robert Logan, Ruth M. Parker

2020Journal of Health Communication31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Masks, now recommended and worn by a growing proportion of the world's population, have reflected various perceived meaning across time. This paper provides a brief history of the socio-cultural perceptions attached to wearing a mask by surveying how masks were perceived in ancient Greece and Rome, the origins of medical masks, and the ascribed socio-cultural meaning of masks during the COVID-19 pandemic. The use of a mask has historically diverse perceived meanings; currently, wearing a mask communicates a bipolar socio-cultural meaning and a nuanced, divisive symbology. To some, masks communicate a belief in medical science and a desire to protect one's neighbor from contagion. To others, a mask communicates oppression, government overreach, and a skepticism toward established scientific principles. It is the mask's ability to signal a deception, or extrapolated more broadly, a value system, that is highly relevant to current public health guidelines encouraging mask use to decrease the transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the novel coronavirus responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic. Public health officials and providers should utilize evidence-based health communication strategies when findings warrant a reversed recommendation of a symbol (such as masks) with a legacy of socio-cultural underpinnings that are deep-seated, complex, and emotional.

Topics & Concepts

Meaning (existential)Symbol (formal)PandemicGovernment (linguistics)Public healthSkepticismDeceptionPerceptionPsychologyPopulationCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Social psychologyAestheticsMedicineEpistemologyArtEnvironmental healthDiseaseNursingProgramming languageLinguisticsInfectious disease (medical specialty)PsychotherapistPhilosophyPathologyComputer scienceNeuroscienceInfection Control and Ventilation