Readapting Pandemic Premediation and Propaganda: Soderbergh’s <i>Contagion</i> amid COVID-19

Steven Soderbergh’s pandemic thriller <i>Contagion</i> (2011) was trending strongly on streaming services in the US in the early days of COVID-19 restrictions, where the fiction took on an unforeseen afterlife amid a real pandemic. In this new context, many viewers and critics reported t...

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Main Author: Kevin C. Moore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Arts
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/9/4/112
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spelling doaj-9522b2c06af8481ea184b1071be929c02020-11-25T04:04:07ZengMDPI AGArts2076-07522020-11-01911211210.3390/arts9040112Readapting Pandemic Premediation and Propaganda: Soderbergh’s <i>Contagion</i> amid COVID-19Kevin C. Moore0Program in Writing and Rhetoric, Stanford University, 590 Escondido Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-3069, USASteven Soderbergh’s pandemic thriller <i>Contagion</i> (2011) was trending strongly on streaming services in the US in the early days of COVID-19 restrictions, where the fiction took on an unforeseen afterlife amid a real pandemic. In this new context, many viewers and critics reported that the film seemed “uncanny,” if not prophetic. Frameworks such as Priscilla Wald’s notion of the “outbreak narrative,” as well Richard Grusin’s “premediation,” may help to theorize this affective experience on the part of viewers. Yet the film was also designed as a public health propaganda film to make people fear and better prepare for pandemics, and the present account works to recover this history. Although the film takes liberties with reality, in particular by proposing an unlikely vaccine-development narrative, Soderbergh and screenwriter Scott Z. Burns consulted prominent scientists and policymakers as they wrote the film, in particular Larry Brilliant and Ian Lipkin. These same scientists were consulted again in March 2020, when an effort spearheaded by Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public health reunited the star-studded cast of <i>Contagion</i>, who created at home a series of public health announcement videos that might be thought of as a kind of re-adaptation of the film for the COVID-19 era. These public service announcements touch on key aspects of pandemic experience premediated by the original film, such as social distancing and vaccine development. Yet their very production as “work-from-home” illustrates how the film neglected to address the status of work during a pandemic. Recovering this history via <i>Contagion</i> allows us to rethink the film as a cultural placeholder marking a shift from post-9/11 security politics to the pandemic moment. It also becomes possible to map the cultural meaning of the technologies and practices that have facilitated the pandemic, which shape a new social order dictated by the fears and desires of an emerging work-from-home class.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/9/4/112<i>Contagion</i>propagandapandemicpremediationSteven SoderberghScott Z. Burns
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language English
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author Kevin C. Moore
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Readapting Pandemic Premediation and Propaganda: Soderbergh’s <i>Contagion</i> amid COVID-19
Arts
<i>Contagion</i>
propaganda
pandemic
premediation
Steven Soderbergh
Scott Z. Burns
author_facet Kevin C. Moore
author_sort Kevin C. Moore
title Readapting Pandemic Premediation and Propaganda: Soderbergh’s <i>Contagion</i> amid COVID-19
title_short Readapting Pandemic Premediation and Propaganda: Soderbergh’s <i>Contagion</i> amid COVID-19
title_full Readapting Pandemic Premediation and Propaganda: Soderbergh’s <i>Contagion</i> amid COVID-19
title_fullStr Readapting Pandemic Premediation and Propaganda: Soderbergh’s <i>Contagion</i> amid COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Readapting Pandemic Premediation and Propaganda: Soderbergh’s <i>Contagion</i> amid COVID-19
title_sort readapting pandemic premediation and propaganda: soderbergh’s <i>contagion</i> amid covid-19
publisher MDPI AG
series Arts
issn 2076-0752
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Steven Soderbergh’s pandemic thriller <i>Contagion</i> (2011) was trending strongly on streaming services in the US in the early days of COVID-19 restrictions, where the fiction took on an unforeseen afterlife amid a real pandemic. In this new context, many viewers and critics reported that the film seemed “uncanny,” if not prophetic. Frameworks such as Priscilla Wald’s notion of the “outbreak narrative,” as well Richard Grusin’s “premediation,” may help to theorize this affective experience on the part of viewers. Yet the film was also designed as a public health propaganda film to make people fear and better prepare for pandemics, and the present account works to recover this history. Although the film takes liberties with reality, in particular by proposing an unlikely vaccine-development narrative, Soderbergh and screenwriter Scott Z. Burns consulted prominent scientists and policymakers as they wrote the film, in particular Larry Brilliant and Ian Lipkin. These same scientists were consulted again in March 2020, when an effort spearheaded by Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public health reunited the star-studded cast of <i>Contagion</i>, who created at home a series of public health announcement videos that might be thought of as a kind of re-adaptation of the film for the COVID-19 era. These public service announcements touch on key aspects of pandemic experience premediated by the original film, such as social distancing and vaccine development. Yet their very production as “work-from-home” illustrates how the film neglected to address the status of work during a pandemic. Recovering this history via <i>Contagion</i> allows us to rethink the film as a cultural placeholder marking a shift from post-9/11 security politics to the pandemic moment. It also becomes possible to map the cultural meaning of the technologies and practices that have facilitated the pandemic, which shape a new social order dictated by the fears and desires of an emerging work-from-home class.
topic <i>Contagion</i>
propaganda
pandemic
premediation
Steven Soderbergh
Scott Z. Burns
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/9/4/112
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