Abstract
Metaphor has been established and extensively examined as one of the tools experts deploy to explain, simplify and transform complex scientific discourse into the knowledge suitable for the audience of non-experts. However, relatively little research has been conducted on metaphor scenario (Musolff 2006, 2016a) and its role in this process. Therefore, in this paper we explore how metaphor scenario is used to explain Covid-19 vaccines’ safety and effectiveness to the population in an understandable manner in order to speed up the immunization process in Serbia. By analysing a data set gathered from various Serbian electronic news media sources ( NovaS , N1 , Danas , Vreme , Večernje novosti , Mondo , Politika , Telegraf , Krug ) published from January to December 2021, we aim to explore (1) how the three metaphor scenarios, combat, container and movement, may help simplify complex scientific concepts in the pro-vaccine discourse; and (2) how the conceptual elements of these scenarios and their interconnected relations are used for this purpose. The findings showed that these conventional scenarios manifest their explanatory potential by means of several sub-scenarios, whose conceptual elements establish useful mappings relying on rarely used components of source domains. The results confirm that metaphor scenarios may be used strategically by medical experts as an apt explanatory tool to simplify challengingly complex scientific concepts to the general public. The paper contributes to current research on the role that metaphor and other cognitive instruments play in science popularization.
Publisher
Peoples' Friendship University of Russia
Reference52 articles.
1. Abdel-Raheem, Ahmed & Reem Alkhammash. 2022. ‘To get or not to get vaccinated against COVID-19’: Saudi women, vaccine hesitancy, and framing effects. Discourse & Communication 16 (1). 21-36. https://doi.org/10.1177/17504813211043724
2. Anesa, Patrizia. 2016. The deconstruction and reconstruction of legal information in expert-lay online interaction. ESP Today 4 (1). 69-86.
3. Augé, Anaïs. 2021. Ideological and explanatory uses of the covid-19 as a war metaphor in science. Review of Cognitive Linguistics 20 (2). 1-39. https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.00117.aug
4. Balteiro, Isabel. 2017. Metaphor in Ebola’s popularized scientific discourse. Ibérica 34. 209-230.
5. Bogetić, Ksenija, Andrijana Broćić & Katarina Rasulić. 2019. Linguistic metaphor identification in Serbian. In Susan Nacey, Aletta G. Dorst, Tina Krennmayr & W. Gudrun Reijnierse (eds.), Metaphor identification in multiple languages: MIPVU around the world, 203-226. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. https://doi.org/10.1075/celcr.22.10bog
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献