Journal Article10.1207/S15327868MS1202_2
Metaphor and Politics
228
TL;DR: For at least 3 decades, researchers and political theorists have been interested in how metaphors are used as persuasive devices, and they have focused on the necessity of communication in politics and have noted that metaphors have assisted politicians in communicating more effectively by addressing latent symbolic themes residing in segments of the public consciousness.
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Abstract: For at least 3 decades, researchers and political theorists have been interested in how metaphors are used as persuasive devices. Theorists in this area have tended to assume that metaphors are persuasive, and they have discussed how this process occurs. They have focused on the necessity of communication in politics and have noted that metaphors have assisted politicians in communicating more effectively by addressing latent symbolic themes residing in segments of the public consciousness. Metaphors also fit in with the new information-processing models of political knowledge, in which metaphors collapse complicated issues into more simplified packets of information that can be easily understood by the public. However, research in this area is much more equivocal. Metaphors do not appear to be generally effective, so the future of research needs to focus upon specific areas in which they are effective as opposed to answering the general question of whether they are effective or not.
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TL;DR: This article examined the relationship between the rated charisma of US presidents and their frequency of use of metaphors in inaugural addresses, and found that metaphor is important for inspiring audience members, which increases our understanding of the process by which charismatic leaders inspire and motivate followers.
Metaphors in qualitative research: shedding light or casting shadows?
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References
Some correlates of language intensity
TL;DR: Some correlates of language intensity are discussed in this article, with a focus on the relationship between language intensity and the frequency of utterances. pp 415-420 and 468-420.
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