The Covid‐19 pandemic has repeatedly been framed by politicians and the media alike as this generation’s “Great War.” Metaphors are often used in political reportage as effective discursive tools to influence and persuade readers. War metaphors especially are frequently used in election campaigns, leadership spills, and during times of political unrest to portray politics as a brutal and competitive (masculine) arena. As such, the use of militaristic language and war metaphors to describe the shared challenges during a global pandemic is unsurprising. Framing the pandemic as a war can rally citizens by appealing to their sense of national and civic duty at a moment of crisis. Yet such framing is problematic as it draws on stereotyping cultu...
© 2020 by Johns Hopkins University Press. In this commentary, written in two bursts—the first comple...
Metaphors have been widely used in communication about the Covid-19 pandemic. The virus has been des...
Research consistently shows that western women are not only less supportive of wars than men, but th...
This thesis aims to investigate the narrative created around the covid-19 virus as a security threat...
This paper analyses the war metaphor’s immediate and pervasive diffusion during the Covid19 pandemi...
The COVID-19 pandemic has undermined the division between the private sphere of the home and the pub...
The health crisis caused by the spread of COVID-19 has normalized the “war” rhetoric as an argumenta...
© 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...
The article departs from the contradiction that the importance of care for society was publicly ackn...
Global pandemics are likely to increase in frequency and severity, and media communication of key m...
© 2020 Windsor et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Com...
Research consistently shows that western women are not only less supportive of wars than men, but th...
International audienceThe Covid-19 crisis has many characteristics susceptible to emphasize gendered...
This paper analyses contemporary Australian newspaper coverage of the threat of pandemic influenza i...
© 2020 by Johns Hopkins University Press. In this commentary, written in two bursts—the first comple...
Metaphors have been widely used in communication about the Covid-19 pandemic. The virus has been des...
Research consistently shows that western women are not only less supportive of wars than men, but th...
This thesis aims to investigate the narrative created around the covid-19 virus as a security threat...
This paper analyses the war metaphor’s immediate and pervasive diffusion during the Covid19 pandemi...
The COVID-19 pandemic has undermined the division between the private sphere of the home and the pub...
The health crisis caused by the spread of COVID-19 has normalized the “war” rhetoric as an argumenta...
© 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...
The article departs from the contradiction that the importance of care for society was publicly ackn...
Global pandemics are likely to increase in frequency and severity, and media communication of key m...
© 2020 Windsor et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Com...
Research consistently shows that western women are not only less supportive of wars than men, but th...
International audienceThe Covid-19 crisis has many characteristics susceptible to emphasize gendered...
This paper analyses contemporary Australian newspaper coverage of the threat of pandemic influenza i...
© 2020 by Johns Hopkins University Press. In this commentary, written in two bursts—the first comple...
Metaphors have been widely used in communication about the Covid-19 pandemic. The virus has been des...
Research consistently shows that western women are not only less supportive of wars than men, but th...