Affiliation:
1. Filozofski fakultet Osijek
2. ELTE Budapest
Abstract
One of
most dominant conceptual metaphors used to talk about the COVID-19 across
languages and cultures is the war
metaphor, but many other metaphors have been attested, exploiting a wide
range of source domains. It appears, however, that there is a sort of
evolutionary movement concerning the frequency with which particular source
domains are used, progressing first towards more aggressive, war-like
concepts, then after a sort of culmination in the spring of 2020, towards
other related concepts, as the epidemic turned into a pandemic, and as new
waves of infections emerged. However, we can now observe the beginnings of a
new cycle: the domain that has so far been conceptualized metaphorically in
terms of other source domains is now beginning to emancipate itself, becoming
itself a source domain. Metaphorically speaking, when we study this switch,
we study not the career of a metaphor, but the career of a domain (which in
our opinion is even more exciting than the former enterprise). The aim of
this article is to shed some light on this incipient trend by taking a look
at the constellation of two (among many possible) factors that may have
facilitated this mutation: the phenomenon of domain homogenization (towards a
negative paragon) as a semantic catalyst and the family of XY(Z)
constructions as the formal catalyst.
Publisher
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Osijek
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
1 articles.
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