Evaluation in media discourse: European perspectives
In: Linguistic Insights Volume 207
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In: Linguistic Insights Volume 207
1. Accessing the Public Sphere: An Introduction to the Volume -- 2. Broken Understanding: Corrupted Participation in Emerging Public Spaces -- 3. Transcultural Communication During a Misinfodemic: How Antiquated Science Communication Models and Information Deserts Enhance Vulnerability to Beliefs in False Health and Science Information -- 4. Sacred Paths to Magnanimity in a Polarized World -- 5. Toward a New Set of Practices in Intercultural Communication -- 6. Ethical Challenges for Intercultural Mediators in Preventing and Remedying Potential Unequal Access to the Public Space -- 7. The Effect of Empathic Mediation in Conflict Resolution.
In: Linguistic insights: Studies in Language and Communication 170
In: Sprachwissenschaft Bd. 19
From the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, governments, health agencies, public institutions and the media around the world have made use of metaphors to talk about the virus, its effects and the measures needed to reduce its spread. Dominant among these metaphors have been war metaphors (e.g. battles, front lines, combat), which present the virus as an enemy that needs to be fought and beaten. These metaphors have attracted an unprecedented amount of criticism from diverse social agents, for a variety of reasons. In reaction, #ReframeCovid was born as an open, collaborative and non-prescriptive initiative to collect alternatives to war metaphors for COVID-19 in any language, and to (critically) reflect on the use of figurative language about the virus, its impact and the measures taken in response. The paper summarises the background, aims, development and main outcomes to date of the initiative, and launches a call for scholars within the metaphor community to feed into and use the #ReframeCovid collection in their own basic and applied research projects.
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