It’s Raining Immigrants! HELLelujah!: The Metaphors of Immigration in Early American Magazines (1828–1959)
Authors:
- Anna Rogos-Hebda
Abstract
Stemming from a conviction that the same phenomenon can be construed differently by different cognisers, metaphors used “reflect[ing] and effect[ing] underlying construal operations which are ideological in nature” (Hart 2011, 2), the present paper investigates how the conceptualisation and linguistic construction of IMMIGRANTS changed over time, forwarding a convenient representation of reality. To that end, the study marries the Cognitive Linguistic approach to Critical Discourse Analysis (Charteris-Black 2004; Hart 2010; 2011; 2015) with the multifactorial usage-feature analysis (Glynn 2010). The results have shown that in the times of increased migration IMMIGRANTS were objectified, their otherness foregrounded through appropriate discursive strategies and topoi. Curbing immigration in later periods contributed to an observable shift in the linguistic representation of the immigrant out-group.
- Record ID
- UAMf1983675f41f483d8380998e6509c7e6
- Author
- Journal series
- Anglica. An International Journal of English Studies, ISSN 0860-5734
- Issue year
- 2020
- Vol
- 29
- No
- 2
- Pages
- 115-134
- Keywords in English
- Critical Metaphor Analysis, Cognitive Linguistics, conceptual metaphor, im-migrants, R, multifactorial usage-feature analysis, COHA, historical linguistics, discur-sive construction
- DOI
- DOI:10.7311/0860-5734.29.2.06 Opening in a new tab
- URL
- https://anglica-journal.com/resources/html/article/details?id=207727 Opening in a new tab
- Language
- (en) English
- Score (nominal)
- 70
- Score source
- journalList
- Score
- = 70.0, 12-01-2022, ArticleFromJournal
- Uniform Resource Identifier
- https://researchportal.amu.edu.pl/info/article/UAMf1983675f41f483d8380998e6509c7e6/
- URN
urn:amu-prod:UAMf1983675f41f483d8380998e6509c7e6
* presented citation count is obtained through Internet information analysis and it is close to the number calculated by the Publish or PerishOpening in a new tab system.