The crisis caused by Covid-19 has been largely communicated in terms of metaphors, which allow to describe an abstract or novel concept (target domain) in terms of a more concrete and familiar one (source domain). This study aims to analyze comparatively metaphors used to refer to Covid-19 in a collection of articles published in March 2020 by two newspapers, the Italian La Repubblica and the British The Guardian, in order to identify similarities or differences be tween the two languages. Following a corpus-based approach, the articles have been archived in two separate monolingual corpora and studied using an online tool for text analysis. The meta phorical expressions retrieved have been compared and categorized according to the semantic fields to which the source domains belong, and subsequently organized in domain shifts. The results show that the newspapers framed the same period of the pandemic in similar ways, with a prevalence of war metaphors.
Midea, C., Covid-19 in Metaphors: A Corpus-Based Analysis of Italian and English Newspaper Articles, <<L'ANALISI LINGUISTICA E LETTERARIA>>, 2024; 2024 (3): 83-109. [doi:10.69117/ALL.2024.3.05] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/314242]
Covid-19 in Metaphors: A Corpus-Based Analysis of Italian and English Newspaper Articles
Midea, Chiara
Primo
2024
Abstract
The crisis caused by Covid-19 has been largely communicated in terms of metaphors, which allow to describe an abstract or novel concept (target domain) in terms of a more concrete and familiar one (source domain). This study aims to analyze comparatively metaphors used to refer to Covid-19 in a collection of articles published in March 2020 by two newspapers, the Italian La Repubblica and the British The Guardian, in order to identify similarities or differences be tween the two languages. Following a corpus-based approach, the articles have been archived in two separate monolingual corpora and studied using an online tool for text analysis. The meta phorical expressions retrieved have been compared and categorized according to the semantic fields to which the source domains belong, and subsequently organized in domain shifts. The results show that the newspapers framed the same period of the pandemic in similar ways, with a prevalence of war metaphors.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



