Metaphor in Ebola’s popularized scientific discourse
-
1
Universitat d'Alacant
info
ISSN: 1139-7241
Año de publicación: 2017
Número: 34
Páginas: 209-230
Tipo: Artículo
Otras publicaciones en: Ibérica: Revista de la Asociación Europea de Lenguas para Fines Específicos ( AELFE )
Resumen
El presente artículo identifica, describe y analiza casos específicos de metáforas, dentro del más general de la salud o de las enfermedades, utilizados para representar y explicar diez elementos o dominios destino en artículos de popularización científica dedicados a la enfermedad o el virus del Ébola. Las metáforas descriptivas y explicativas se derivan de objetos o experiencias culturalmente relevantes, que permiten a los científicos, a los profesionales de la medicina y a los periodistas comunicar de forma efectiva a destinatarios no expertos en un lenguaje menos complejo y más comprensible y llano información científica sobre el Ébola. Además de la descripción de casos específicos de metáforas sobre el Ébola (correspondientes a marcos generales como EL ÉBOLA ES LA GUERRA o LA RECUPERACIÓN ES UN CAMINO), este trabajo aborda los fines, funciones y efectos que estas metáforas, normalmente consideradas como técnicas de reformulación (Jacobi, 1994), tienen dentro de la popularización de una importante amenaza para la salud que recientemente ha provocado la alarma general. Por “popularización” entendemos la función comunicativa que tiene la metáfora al acercar una cuestión científica a la población mundial o a la sociedad en general, o el proceso de llevar la ciencia a la vida cotidiana (Väliverronen, 1993). Para nuestro análisis se ha estudiado una muestra de artículos procedentes de la revista Scientific American
Referencias bibliográficas
- Black, M. (1962). Models and Metaphors. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press.
- Boyd, R. (1993). “Metaphor and theory change: What is ‘metaphor’ a metaphor for?” in Ortony, A. (ed.), Metaphor and Thought, 2nd ed., 481-533. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Brown, R.H. (1986). “Rhetoric and the science of history”. Quarterly Journal of Speech 72: 148-161.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. URL: https://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014west-africa/case-counts.html [15/01/17].
- Ciapuscio, G. (2003). “Formulation and reformulation procedures in verbal interaction between experts and (semi-)laypersons”. Discourse Studies 5,2: 207-233.
- Clarke, J. (1992). “Cancer, heart disease and AIDS: What do media tell us about these diseases?”. Health Communication 4,2: 105-120.
- Clarke, J. (1999). “Prostate cancer’s hegemonic masculinity in select print mass media depictions (1974-1995)”. Health Communication 11,1: 59-75.
- Cuadrado, G. & P. Durán (2013). “Proposal for a semantic hierarchy of terminological metaphors in science and technology”. International Journal of English Linguistics 3,4: 1-15.
- Czechmeister, C.A. (1994). “Metaphor in illness and nursing: A two-edged sword. A discussion of the social use of metaphor in everyday language, and implications of nursing and nursing education”. Journal of Advanced Nursing 19: 1226-1233.
- Demjén, Z. & E. Semino (2017). “Using metaphor in healthcare: Physical health” in Z. Demjén & E. Semino (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Metaphor and Language, 385-399. New York: Taylor and Francis.
- Demmen, J., E. Semino, Z. Demjén, V. Koller, S. Payne, H. Hardie, & P. Rayson (2015). “A computer-assisted study of the use of Violence metaphors for cancer and end of life by patients, family carers and health professionals”. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 22: 205-231.
- Dirven, R. & F.J. Ruiz de Mendoza (2010). “Looking back at 30 years of cognitive linguistics” in E. Tabakowska, M. Choinski & L. Wiraszka (eds.), Cognitive Linguistics in Action: From Theory to Application and Back, 13-70. Berlin, New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
- Fourez, G. (1994). Alfabetización científica y tecnológica. Buenos Aires: Ediciones Colihue.
- Gibbs, R.W. (2011a). “Evaluating conceptual metaphor theory”. Discourse Processes 48,8: 529-562.
- Gibbs, R.W. (2011b). “Multiple constraints in theories of metaphor”. Discourse Processes 48,8: 575-584.
- Gibbs, R.W. & G.J. Steen (eds.) (1999). Metaphor in Cognitive Linguistics. Amsterdam, Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
- Goatly, A. (1997). The Language of Metaphors. London: Routledge.
- Guerrero, E. (1990). “AIDS as a monster in science fiction and horror cinema”. Journal of Popular Film & Television 18,3: 86-93.
- Gwyn, R. (1999). “‘Captain of my own ship’: Metaphor and the discourse of chronic illness” in L. Cameron & G. Low (eds.), Researching and Applying Metaphor, 203-220. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Haack, S. (1994). “Dry truth and real knowledge’: Epistemologies of metaphor and metaphors of epistemology” in J. Hintikka (ed.), Aspects of Metaphor, 1-22. Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
- Hanne, M. & S.J. Hawken (2007). “Metaphors for illness in contemporary media”. Medical Humanities 33: 93-99.
- Hauser, D.J. & N. Schwartz (2015). “The war on prevention: Bellicose cancer metaphors hurt (some) prevention intentions”. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 41: 66-77.
- Hellsten, I. (1997). “The door to Europe or outpost towards Russia?: Political metaphors in Finnish EU journalism” in J. Koivisto & E. Lauk (eds.), Journalism at the Crossroads, 121-141. Tartu and Tampere: Tartu University Press.
- Hesse, M. (1970) “The explanatory function of metaphor” in Y. Bar-Hillel (ed.), Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science, 249-259. Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Company.
- Hidalgo Downing, L. & B. Kraljevic Mujic (2009). “INFECTIOUS DISEASES ARE SLEEPING MONSTERS: Conventional and culturally adapted new metaphors in a corpus of abstracts on immunology”. Ibérica 17: 61-82.
- Inayatullah, S. (1998). “Causal layered analysis: Poststructuralism as a method”. Futures 30,8: 815-829.
- Jacobi, D. (1994). “Discours scientifiques spécialises, discours vulgarises” in J. Piqué, J.V. Andreu-Besó & M.C. Cuéllar (eds.), La langue de spécialité et le discours scientifique, 9-18. Valencia: NAU Llibres.
- Joffe, H. & G. Haarhoff (2002). “Representations of far-flung illnesses: The case of Ebola in Britain”. Social Science & Medicine 54,6: 955-969.
- Kamara, K. (2016). “Ebola: In search of a new metaphor”. Futures 84: 193-200.
- Keller, E.F. (1996). “El lenguaje de la genética y su influencia en la investigación”. Quark: Ciencia, medicina, comunicación y cultura 4: 53-63.
- Knudsen, S. (2003). “Scientific metaphors going public”. Journal of Pragmatics 35: 1247-1263.
- Kövecses, Z. (1990). Emotion Concepts. New York: Springer-Verlag.
- Kövecses, Z. (2006). Language, Mind, and Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Kövecses, Z. (2010). Metaphor: A Practical Introduction, 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press.
- Lakoff, G. & M. Johnson (1980). Metaphors We Live By. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Lakoff, G. (1987a). Women, Fire and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal about the Mind. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
- Lakoff, G. (1987b). “The death of dead metaphor”. Metaphor and Symbolic Activity 2: 143-147.
- Larson, B.M.H., B. Nerlich, & P. Wallis (2005). “Metaphors and biorisks. The war on infectious diseases and invasive species”. Science Communication 26,3: 243-268.
- Leatherdale, W.H. (1974). The Role of Analogy, Model and Metaphor in Science. Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Company.
- Lewenstein, B. (1995). “Science and the media” in S. Jasanoff, G. Markle, J. Petersen & T. Pinch (eds.), Handbook of Science and Technology, 343360. London: Sage.
- Loftus, S. (2011). “Pain and its metaphors: A dialogical approach”. Journal of Medical Humanities 32: 213-230.
- Meyers, L., T. Frawley, S. Goss, & C. Kang (2015). “Ebola virus outbreak 2014: Clinical review for emergency physicians”. Annals of Emergency Medicine 65,1: 101-108.
- Ortony, A. (ed.) (1993). Metaphor and Thought, 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
- Pragglejaz Group (2007). “MIP: A method for identifying metaphorically used words in discourse”. Metaphor and Symbol 22,1: 1-39.
- Prelli, L. (1989). A Rhetoric of Science. Inventing Scientific Discourse. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
- Reisfield, G.M. & G.R. Wilson (2004). “Use of metaphor in the discourse on cancer”. Journal of Clinical Oncology 22,19: 4024-4027.
- Ricoeur, P. (2003). The Rule of Metaphor: The Creation of Meaning in Language. London: Routledge Classics.
- Semino, E. (2008). Metaphor in Discourse. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Semino, E., Z. Demjén, J. Demmen, V. Koller, S. Payne, H. Hardie, & P. Rayson (2015). “The online use of Violence and Journey metaphors by cancer patients, as compared with health professionals: A mixed methods study”. BMJ Supportive and Palliative Care 0: 1-7. [doi:10.1136/bmjspcare2014-000785].
- Sharf, B. & V. Freimuth (1993). “The construction of illness on entertainment television: Coping with cancer on thirtysomething”. Health Communication 5,3: 141-160.
- Smith, T.C. (2006). Deadly Diseases and Epidemics: Ebola. Philadelphia: Chelsea House.
- Sontag, S. (1978). Illness as Metaphor. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
- Sontag, S. (1989). Illness as Metaphor and AIDS and Its Metaphors. London, New York: Penguin Modern Classics.
- Steen, G.J., A.G. Dorst, J.B. Herrmann, A.A. Kaal, T. Krennmayr, & T. Pasma (2010). A Method for Linguistic Metaphor Identification. From MIP to MIPVU. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
- Stern, J. (2000). Metaphor in Context. Cambridge: The MIT Press.
- Tay, D. (2017). “Using metaphor in healthcare: Mental health” in Z. Demjén & E. Semino (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Metaphor and Language, 371-384. New York: Taylor and Francis.
- Trčková, D. (2015). “Representations of Ebola and its victims in liberal American newspapers”. Topics in Linguistics 16: 29-41.
- Ungar, S. (1998). “Hot crises and media reassurance: A comparison of emerging diseases and Ebola Zaire”. British Journal of Sociology 49, 1: 36-56.
- Väliverronen, E. (1993). “Science and the media: Changing relations”. Science Studies 6,2: 23-34.
- Vellek, T. (2016). Media Framing of the Ebola Crisis. Undergraduate Honors Thesis, Sanford School of Public Policy Duke University.
- Weinrich, H. (1995). “Wissenschaftssprache, Sprachkultur und die Einheit der Wissenschaften” in H. Kretzenbacher & H. Weinrich (eds.), Linguistik der Wissenschaftssprache, 155-174. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.
- Widdowson, H.G. (1974). “Literary and scientific uses of English”. English Language Teaching Journal 28,3: 282-292.
- Williams Camus, J.T. (2009). “Metaphors of cancer in scientific popularization articles in the British press”. Discourse Studies 11,4: 465-495.
- Zwicky, J. (2014). Wisdom & Metaphor. Kentville: Gaspereau Press.