TY - JOUR
T1 - Framing metaphor use over time
T2 - ‘Free Economy’ metaphors in Hong Kong political discourse (1997–2017)
AU - Zeng, Winnie Huiheng
AU - Burgers, Christian
AU - Ahrens, Kathleen
N1 - Funding Information:
The first author would like to acknowledge the Department of English at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University for providing a PhD scholarship as the financial support for this research. The third author would like to acknowledge the support of a research grant (Dean's Reserve Grant #ZE8V) from Faculty of Humanities at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University . The first and third authors also thank the support of the Research Center for Professional Communication in English at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2021/3
Y1 - 2021/3
N2 - Diachronic studies on metaphor use in public discourse have primarily focused on Inner Circle English and European languages. However, the usage patterns of specific metaphorical frames over time is universal or cultural-specific remains underexplored. This article investigates the diachronic changes of economic metaphors focusing on the concept of FREE ECONOMY in a corpus of Hong Kong political discourse spanning two decades (1997–2017). We analyzed fundamental changes (transformations of source domains) and incremental changes (transformations of source-target mapping principles) in FREE ECONOMY metaphors. We found that FREE ECONOMY metaphors have slightly decreased over time. No fundamental changes were found in the use of the four frequently occurring source domains: JOURNEY, LIVING ORGANISM, SPORT, and BUILDING. The meanings of FREE ECONOMY metaphors either remained mostly constant (LIVING ORGANISM and SPORT metaphors) or underwent incremental changes (JOURNEY and BUILDING metaphors). We argue that the constancy and the incremental change were two rhetorical strategies political leaders used to frame their political agenda for achieving full economic liberalization in Hong Kong. Given the complex socio-historical background of Hong Kong, this study provides a distinct East–West perspective on diachronic economic metaphor use in an Outer Circle English context.
AB - Diachronic studies on metaphor use in public discourse have primarily focused on Inner Circle English and European languages. However, the usage patterns of specific metaphorical frames over time is universal or cultural-specific remains underexplored. This article investigates the diachronic changes of economic metaphors focusing on the concept of FREE ECONOMY in a corpus of Hong Kong political discourse spanning two decades (1997–2017). We analyzed fundamental changes (transformations of source domains) and incremental changes (transformations of source-target mapping principles) in FREE ECONOMY metaphors. We found that FREE ECONOMY metaphors have slightly decreased over time. No fundamental changes were found in the use of the four frequently occurring source domains: JOURNEY, LIVING ORGANISM, SPORT, and BUILDING. The meanings of FREE ECONOMY metaphors either remained mostly constant (LIVING ORGANISM and SPORT metaphors) or underwent incremental changes (JOURNEY and BUILDING metaphors). We argue that the constancy and the incremental change were two rhetorical strategies political leaders used to frame their political agenda for achieving full economic liberalization in Hong Kong. Given the complex socio-historical background of Hong Kong, this study provides a distinct East–West perspective on diachronic economic metaphor use in an Outer Circle English context.
KW - Diachronic analysis
KW - Free economy
KW - Fundamental and Incremental change
KW - Metaphorical framing
KW - Political discourse
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85099797453&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.lingua.2020.102955
DO - 10.1016/j.lingua.2020.102955
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85099797453
SN - 0024-3841
VL - 252
JO - Lingua
JF - Lingua
M1 - 102955
ER -