Representations of Ebola and its victims in liberal American newspapers

IF 0.2 N/A LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Topics in Linguistics Pub Date : 2015-12-01 DOI:10.2478/topling-2015-0009
Dita Trčková
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引用次数: 20

Abstract

Abstract Combining critical discourse analysis and the cognitive theory of metaphor, the study analyses hard news on Ebola from two American newspapers of a liberal political orientation, The New York Times and The New York Daily News, to investigate metaphoric representations of the disease and portrayals of its victims. It is revealed that both newspapers heavily rely on a single conceptual metaphor of EBOLA AS WAR, with only two alternative metaphors of EBOLA AS AN ANIMATE/HUMAN BEING and EBOLA AS A NATURAL CATASTROPHE employed. All three metaphoric themes assign the role of a culprit solely to the virus, which stands in contrast to non-metaphoric discursive allocations of blame for the situation in Africa, assigning responsibility mainly to man-made factors. African victims tend to be impersonalized and portrayed as voiceless and agentless, rarely occupying the role of a “fighter” in the military metaphoric representation of the disease, which runs counter to the findings of recent studies detecting a change towards a more positive image of Africa in the media. Both newspapers fail to represent infected ordinary Africans as sovereign agents, hindering readers from reflexively identifying with them.
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美国自由派报纸对埃博拉及其受害者的报道
摘要:本研究结合批判性话语分析和隐喻认知理论,分析了两家具有自由政治倾向的美国报纸《纽约时报》和《纽约每日新闻》上关于埃博拉病毒的硬新闻,以探讨这种疾病的隐喻表现和对受害者的描绘。据透露,这两份报纸都严重依赖于埃博拉作为战争的单一概念隐喻,只有两个可供选择的隐喻:埃博拉作为一个动物/人类和埃博拉作为一场自然灾难。所有这三个隐喻主题都将罪魁祸首的角色完全归咎于病毒,这与非隐喻性地将非洲局势归咎于人为因素的话语分配形成鲜明对比。非洲受害者往往没有人格,被描绘成没有发言权和无主体的人,很少在这种疾病的军事隐喻中扮演“战士”的角色,这与最近的研究结果背道而驰,这些研究发现,媒体对非洲的形象正在朝着更积极的方向转变。这两份报纸都没有把受感染的普通非洲人描绘成主权代理人,阻碍了读者条件反射性地认同他们。
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来源期刊
Topics in Linguistics
Topics in Linguistics LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS-
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
26 weeks
期刊最新文献
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