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Language Matters - Representations of the term heart failure in English discourse:A large-scale linguistic study
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Acting like a hedgehog in times of pandemic:Metaphorical creativity in the #reframecovid collection
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Abstract:
The need to provide novel but meaningful ways to reason and talk about an unprecedented crisis such as the Covid-19 pandemic has resulted in a surge of creative metaphoric expressions in a variety of communicative settings. In order to investigate novel ways of conceptualizing the pandemic, we consider the metaphors included in the #ReframeCovid collection, a crowdsourced dataset of metaphors for the pandemic that rely on non-war frames. Its heterogeneous makeup of multilingual and multimodal examples (to date, over 550 examples – monomodal and multimodal in 30 languages) offers a unique opportunity to explore the ways in which metaphors have been used creatively to describe different aspects of the coronavirus pandemic. The patterns of metaphor creativity discussed in this paper include: creative realizations (verbal and visual) of wide-scope mappings, the use of one-off source domains, shifts in the valence of the source domain evoked, and the exploitation of source domains that are specific to particular discourse communities. The analysis of multimodal examples contributes to our understanding of the role of metaphor in sense-making and communication at a time of an extraordinary global crisis and will also provide new insights into metaphor creativity as a multidimensional phenomenon that integrates conceptual, discursive and cultural factors.
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URL: https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/156500/2/Sobrino_et_al_2022.pdf https://doi.org/10.1080/10926488.2021.1949599 https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/156500/1/Metaphor_Symbol_2021_pre_publication.pdf https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/156500/
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Corpus Linguistics and Clinical Psychology:Investigating 'personification' in first-person accounts of voice-hearing
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Person-ness of voices in lived experience accounts of psychosis:Combining literary linguistics and clinical psychology
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COVID-19: A forest fire rather than a wave?
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In: Mètode Science Studies Journal - Annual Review; Issue 11 (2021); 5 ; Metode Science Studies Journal; Issue 11 (2021); 5 ; 2174-9221 ; 2174-3487 (2021)
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A linguistic approach to the psychosis continuum: (dis)similarities and (dis)continuities in how clinical and non-clinical voice-hearers talk about their voices ...
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A linguistic approach to the psychosis continuum: (dis)similarities and (dis)continuities in how clinical and non-clinical voice-hearers talk about their voices ...
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“One gives bad compliments about me, and the other one is telling me to do things” – (Im)Politeness and power in reported interactions between voice-hearers and their voices
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A linguistic approach to the psychosis continuum:(dis)similarities and (dis)continuities in how clinical and non-clinical voice-hearers talk about their voices
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A linguistic approach to the psychosis continuum: (dis)similarities and (dis)continuities in how clinical and non-clinical voice-hearers talk about their voices
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In: Cogn Neuropsychiatry (2020)
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A linguistic approach to the psychosis continuum: (dis)similarities and (dis)continuities in how clinical and non-clinical voice-hearers talk about their voices
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Metaphors of Climate Science in Three Genres : Research Articles, Educational Texts, and Secondary School Student Talk
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Emotional Implications of Metaphor:Consequences of Metaphor Framing for Mindset about Cancer
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Metaphors of Climate Science in Three Genres:Research Articles, Educational Texts, and Secondary School Student Talk
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