隐喻
突出
H5N1亚型流感病毒
本能
疾病
历史
环境伦理学
政治学
社会学
医学
法学
生物
病理
生态学
语言学
哲学
病毒学
病毒
作者
Nelya Koteyko,Brian Brown,Paul Crawford
标识
DOI:10.1080/10926480802426787
摘要
This article takes two events in the ongoing story of a predicted UK avian flu epidemic—"the dead parrot" (October 2005) and "the dying swan" (April 2006)—and examines the role and use of three interconnected metaphor scenarios (related to the notions of "journey," "war," and "house") in the UK press coverage about avian influenza in 2005 and 2006. These represent fundamental descriptive and explanatory structures that derive from culturally or phenomenologically salient objects or experiences, and which allow journalists, scientists, and policymakers to reduce the complexity of the threat posed by a disease and to promote risk-management strategies for the disease that appear to make instinctive or intuitive sense to experts and the public. Although similar metaphor scenarios may be used over time, the kinds of reporting they are associated with and the policy scenarios that result from these framings differ depending on the perceived proximity of the disease threat.
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