Metaphors and pandemics: Spanish Flu and Coronavirus in US newspapers. A case-study
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2022
abstract:
The international outbreak of Coronavirus has challenged the stability of our contemporary
societies. However, this is not the first time that humanity is facing a global pandemic. The
1918 Spanish Flu pandemic led to one of the most lethal pandemics. Metaphors play a
fundamental role in influencing how we think and talk about health and illness. With an
understanding of how the Coronavirus and the Spanish Flu are metaphorically represented in
newspaper discourse, it would be easier to shed light on the linguistic process through which
metaphors work and to understand to what extent socio-historical-cultural conditions may
affect the actualisation of a metaphor. This paper shows that metaphors are consistently
present in both time contexts and Coronavirus and Spanish Flu are similarly metaphorically
represented. This might suggest the existence of a rhetoric of pandemics which goes beyond
the specific socio-cultural and political context: a response to a threat as a pandemic is deeply
related with human nature
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
conceptual metaphor; corpus assisted discourse studies; health communication; corpus linguistics
List of contributors:
DEL FANTE, Dario
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