Power in the Pandemic: The UK Government's Discursive Control of the Population

As COVID-19 took hold of the UK, and the world, the UK Government were faced with the complicated challenge of protecting society. Within a system of biopolitical governmentality, the population is controlled not simply through the implementation of explicit rules and laws (although the pandemic saw...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Norman, Isabelle
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69114/
_version_ 1848800534215000064
author Norman, Isabelle
author_facet Norman, Isabelle
author_sort Norman, Isabelle
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description As COVID-19 took hold of the UK, and the world, the UK Government were faced with the complicated challenge of protecting society. Within a system of biopolitical governmentality, the population is controlled not simply through the implementation of explicit rules and laws (although the pandemic saw plenty of these), rather it is directed towards self-governance through mechanisms of conduct of conduct. While the UK has not yet escaped the grip of COVID-19, much literature has nonetheless emerged in its wake already. As lockdown measures were implemented, there was a growing concern that the pandemic was facilitating governmental overreach (Agamben, 2020[a]; Denisenko & Trikoz, 2020; Santis, 2020; Zinn, 2020). Equally important, however, are the implicit tactics used by the government to exert control over the population by shaping the fabric of society. This study found that the Government’s constructions of the roles of science, the Government, the people, and the virus formed an integrated discourse that worked to protect the Government’s position of power and manage the population. The construction of science was employed to protect the Government from a virus with agency outside of the reach of state power, and from the implications of prioritising the economy over the people.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:53:05Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-69114
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:53:05Z
publishDate 2022
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-691142022-07-31T04:42:07Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69114/ Power in the Pandemic: The UK Government's Discursive Control of the Population Norman, Isabelle As COVID-19 took hold of the UK, and the world, the UK Government were faced with the complicated challenge of protecting society. Within a system of biopolitical governmentality, the population is controlled not simply through the implementation of explicit rules and laws (although the pandemic saw plenty of these), rather it is directed towards self-governance through mechanisms of conduct of conduct. While the UK has not yet escaped the grip of COVID-19, much literature has nonetheless emerged in its wake already. As lockdown measures were implemented, there was a growing concern that the pandemic was facilitating governmental overreach (Agamben, 2020[a]; Denisenko & Trikoz, 2020; Santis, 2020; Zinn, 2020). Equally important, however, are the implicit tactics used by the government to exert control over the population by shaping the fabric of society. This study found that the Government’s constructions of the roles of science, the Government, the people, and the virus formed an integrated discourse that worked to protect the Government’s position of power and manage the population. The construction of science was employed to protect the Government from a virus with agency outside of the reach of state power, and from the implications of prioritising the economy over the people. 2022-07-31 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69114/1/Power%20in%20the%20Pandemic%20-%20The%20UK%20Government%27s%20Discursive%20Control%20of%20the%20Population%20%28Updated%29.pdf Norman, Isabelle (2022) Power in the Pandemic: The UK Government's Discursive Control of the Population. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. pandemic; COVID-19; biopolitics; biopower; governmentality; discourse; power; knowledge; population governance
spellingShingle pandemic; COVID-19; biopolitics; biopower; governmentality; discourse; power; knowledge; population governance
Norman, Isabelle
Power in the Pandemic: The UK Government's Discursive Control of the Population
title Power in the Pandemic: The UK Government's Discursive Control of the Population
title_full Power in the Pandemic: The UK Government's Discursive Control of the Population
title_fullStr Power in the Pandemic: The UK Government's Discursive Control of the Population
title_full_unstemmed Power in the Pandemic: The UK Government's Discursive Control of the Population
title_short Power in the Pandemic: The UK Government's Discursive Control of the Population
title_sort power in the pandemic: the uk government's discursive control of the population
topic pandemic; COVID-19; biopolitics; biopower; governmentality; discourse; power; knowledge; population governance
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/69114/