Although Covid-19 has been framed using all manner of metaphors, an as-yet under-examined question is how the spreading virus might itself serve as a metaphor and what purpose this might serve. The article redresses this deficit by identifying shared experiences of the mobile virus as the basis for a metaphorical framework for evaluating and judging human behavior, including alleged rule-breaking, during the pandemic. The article traces the appearance of the metaphor spreading across a broad spectrum of sources that includes political speech, the reporting of crime in prosecutorial and local media sources, judicial opinion and poetry. We observe in some limited contexts a straightforward metaphoric transfer or substitution between mobile pe...
This paper investigates the use of conceptual metaphors in a corpus of news texts on swine flu, publ...
Previous studies have examined WATER metaphors in different discourses, yet there has been limited f...
Since the emergence of HIV/AIDS in the 1980s, social scientists and sociologists of health and illne...
Metaphors have been widely used in communication about the Covid-19 pandemic. The virus has been des...
In 2020, the term ‘infodemic’ rose from relative obscurity to becoming a popular catch-all metaphor,...
In April 2009, reports of a new strain of a deadly flu virus emerged in Mexico. The scarcity of inf...
The article is meant to look at the COVID-19 coverage in political discourse in the frames of the me...
Metaphors abound in descriptions of the COVID-19 pandemic: it is described, among other things, as a...
Drawing on Critical Metaphor Analysis, this study investigates major metaphors of the COVID-19 pande...
© 2020 Hend AlmutairiIt is important to understand how news sources communicate information about pa...
Although pandemics are perceived as scientific and technical problems, their multi-layered political...
This article discusses metaphors used in communication in English about COVID-19 in the light of the...
The new coronavirus has given rise to an abundance of metaphors, all of them involving a major move ...
Since the emergence of Covid-19 in December 2019, metaphors to talk about the pandemic have been ext...
In recent times, many alarm bells have begun to sound: the metaphorical presentation of the COVID-19...
This paper investigates the use of conceptual metaphors in a corpus of news texts on swine flu, publ...
Previous studies have examined WATER metaphors in different discourses, yet there has been limited f...
Since the emergence of HIV/AIDS in the 1980s, social scientists and sociologists of health and illne...
Metaphors have been widely used in communication about the Covid-19 pandemic. The virus has been des...
In 2020, the term ‘infodemic’ rose from relative obscurity to becoming a popular catch-all metaphor,...
In April 2009, reports of a new strain of a deadly flu virus emerged in Mexico. The scarcity of inf...
The article is meant to look at the COVID-19 coverage in political discourse in the frames of the me...
Metaphors abound in descriptions of the COVID-19 pandemic: it is described, among other things, as a...
Drawing on Critical Metaphor Analysis, this study investigates major metaphors of the COVID-19 pande...
© 2020 Hend AlmutairiIt is important to understand how news sources communicate information about pa...
Although pandemics are perceived as scientific and technical problems, their multi-layered political...
This article discusses metaphors used in communication in English about COVID-19 in the light of the...
The new coronavirus has given rise to an abundance of metaphors, all of them involving a major move ...
Since the emergence of Covid-19 in December 2019, metaphors to talk about the pandemic have been ext...
In recent times, many alarm bells have begun to sound: the metaphorical presentation of the COVID-19...
This paper investigates the use of conceptual metaphors in a corpus of news texts on swine flu, publ...
Previous studies have examined WATER metaphors in different discourses, yet there has been limited f...
Since the emergence of HIV/AIDS in the 1980s, social scientists and sociologists of health and illne...