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Rozbrajanie, dozbrajanie. Metafory w dyskursie politycznym

Publication date: 16.11.2015

Yearbook of Cognitive Science, 2015, Volume 8, pp. 35 - 41

https://doi.org/10.4467/20843895RK.14.007.2693

Authors

Anna Plater-Zyberk
Chair in Translation Studies and Intercultural Communication, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Czapskich 4, 31-110 Kraków
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Titles

Rozbrajanie, dozbrajanie. Metafory w dyskursie politycznym

Abstract

Arming and disarming. Metaphorical expressions in political discourse

According to Cognitive Metaphor Theory, metaphorical expressions are considered to be a projection of a clearer and more easily comprehensible cognitive structure on a more abstract or complicated target domain. In other words, metaphorical expressions explain complicated and more abstract notions in terms of easier and less abstract phenomena. However, the choice of a source and a target domain often imposes a certain point of view and sanctions specific interpretations. This characteristic of metaphorical expressions makes them an extremely useful device for political persuasion.
Since the emergence of Cognitive Metaphor Theory there has been a growing number of research focused on the relations between figurative language, power and ideology. This paper focuses on processes of arming and disarming metaphorical expressions in political discourse. The author outlines basic tenets of Cognitive Metaphor Theory, as well as some of its implications on the relations between figurative language, persuasion and ideology. This paper gives also a very concise overview of previous research on arming and disarming metaphorical expressions by Teresa Dobrzyńska [1994] and a study on metaphorical expressions and ideology by Michael Billig and Katie Macmillan [2005].
 

References

Bayley P. (1985). Live Oratory in the Television Age: The Language of Formal Speeches. W: G. Ragazzini, D.R. Miller, P. Bayley (red.), Campaign Language: Language, Image, Myth in the U.S. presidential election 1984. Bologna: CLUEB.

Billig M., Macmillan K. (2005). Metaphor, idiom and ideology: the search for ‘no smoking guns’ across time. „Discourse and Society” 16, s. 459–480.

Czerwiński M. (2006). O potrzebie badań dyskursu. „Studia z Filologii Polskiej i Słowiańskiej” 41, s. 239‒252.

Dobrzyńska T. (1994). Mówiąc przenośnie… Studia o metaforze. Warszawa: Instytut Badań Literackich.

Lakoff G., Johnson M. (1988). Metafory w naszym życiu. Warszawa: Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy.

Lakoff G. (2011). Metaphor and War: The Metaphor System Used to Justify War in the Gulf, 30.08.2011, www2.iath.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Texts/Scholarly/Lakoff_Gulf_Metaphor_1.html [data pobrania: 10.10.2015].

Partington A. (2006). Metaphors, motifs and similies across discourse types. W: A. Stefanowitsch, S.Th. Gries (red.), Corpus-Based Approaches to Metaphor and Metonymy. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
 

Information

Information: Yearbook of Cognitive Science, 2015, Volume 8, pp. 35 - 41

Article type: Original article

Titles:

Polish:

Rozbrajanie, dozbrajanie. Metafory w dyskursie politycznym

English:

Arming and disarming. Metaphorical expressions in political discourse

Authors

Chair in Translation Studies and Intercultural Communication, Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Czapskich 4, 31-110 Kraków

Published at: 16.11.2015

Article status: Open

Licence: None

Percentage share of authors:

Anna Plater-Zyberk (Author) - 100%

Article corrections:

-

Publication languages:

Polish