Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/90450
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Title: First Lady, Secretary of State and Presidential Candidate : a comparative study of the role-dependent use of metaphor in politics
Authors: Ahrens, K 
Issue Date: Aug-2019
Source: In J Perrez, M Reuchamps & O Thibodeau (Eds.), Variation in political metaphor, p. 13-34. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2019
Abstract: While many studies have examined to what extent politicians invoked a particular source domain to advance their ideology, no study to date has focused on the metaphor use of an individual politician across different political roles. This paper fills this gap by analyzing the war metaphors used by Hillary Clinton in her personal speeches in the roles of U.S. First Lady, a U.S. Senator, and as a candidate for the 2008 Democratic nomination for U.S. President and demonstrates that Clinton’s metaphor use reflects a politician who chooses her battles carefully and invokes figurative language to gain support for the causes that are important to her.
Keywords: Conceptual Metaphor Theory
War metaphors
Hillary Clinton
Corpus linguistics
Critical metaphor analysis
ISBN: 9789027203953 (hkb)
9789027262219 (e-book)
DOI: 10.1075/dapsac.85.01ahr
Rights: © John Benjamins Publishing Company
This is the author accepted manuscript of the following book chapter: Ahrens, K. (2019). First Lady, Secretary of State and Presidential Candidate: A Comparative Study of the Role-Dependent Use of Metaphor in Politics. In Julien Perrez, Min Reuchamps and Paul Thibodeau (Eds.) Variation in Political Metaphor. (pp. 13-34). Amsterdam: John Benjamins., which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.85.01ahr
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