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This book uses critical metaphor analysis to show from a cognitive
perspective how climate change is conceptualized in the USA. The
author enriches his linguistic analysis with cognitive aspects such
as source-target domain mapping and metaphor opposition to explain
how metaphor works in terms of framing this issue, drawing on a
Critical Discourse Analysis-informed framework to demonstrate how
politicians represent the climate crisis in their attempts to
trigger social change. Using a data set of speeches given by
US-based politicians, governors and mayors speaking in the context
of the withdrawal of the United States from the Paris Agreement,
the book categorizes metaphors on different conceptions such as
war, construction, unfairness, journey, and cleanliness to bridge
the gap between ecolinguistics and critical metaphor analysis. This
book will be of interest to students and scholars in fields
including applied linguistics, political communication,
ecolinguistics, and cognitive linguistics and psychology.
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