The image of Russia through animal metaphors: A diachronic case study of American media discourse

The image of a country has a critical impact on the degree of its political, economic and cultural influence in the world. This indicates a need to understand various perceptions of a country that exist among other nations and mechanisms of their formation and change in an ever-shifting world. This...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Olga A. Solopova, Don Nilsen, Alleen Nilsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2023-09-01
Series:Russian Journal of Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.rudn.ru/linguistics/article/viewFile/36168/22587
_version_ 1827800049297391616
author Olga A. Solopova
Don Nilsen
Alleen Nilsen
author_facet Olga A. Solopova
Don Nilsen
Alleen Nilsen
author_sort Olga A. Solopova
collection DOAJ
description The image of a country has a critical impact on the degree of its political, economic and cultural influence in the world. This indicates a need to understand various perceptions of a country that exist among other nations and mechanisms of their formation and change in an ever-shifting world. This qualitative case study seeks to examine the changing nature of wild animal metaphors employed to model the image of Russia in American media discourse in the XIX-XXI centuries. The study is limited by two source domains, namely, the beast and the bear. They were analyzed within particular contexts: American English, culture and media discourse. The research data were drawn from dictionaries and corpora. The dictionaries included etymological and explanatory entries, as well as those covering idioms, symbols, and metaphors. The corpora research data were collected from the Corpus of Contemporary American English and Chronicling America, a collection of historic digitalized texts. A total of 218 metaphors were selected from 4929 texts. The metaphors were studied through lexicographic, conceptual metaphor, culture-specific, corpus, discourse, and diachronic methods. The findings of this study suggest that the two metaphors “Russia is a beast” and “Russia is a bear” are frequently used in realizing the strategy of ‘othering’ in XXI century American media discourse. Still, their meanings allowed for variation and modification in the periods of the two countries’ amity and cooperation. In the XIX century and in the years of US-Soviet alliance in WWII the metaphors could evoke positive images of Russia, thus, realizing the strategy of ‘bridging’ or ‘belonging’. The contribution of this study has been to confirm that, whatever metaphorical projections exist in language and culture, historical factors determine choices in any sample of discourse. This could be important for understanding the mechanisms involved in modeling the image of modern Russia in foreign media discourses.
first_indexed 2024-03-11T20:00:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f2df1660a62847719913ba64d75f0cc0
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2687-0088
2686-8024
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-11T20:00:58Z
publishDate 2023-09-01
publisher Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
record_format Article
series Russian Journal of Linguistics
spelling doaj.art-f2df1660a62847719913ba64d75f0cc02023-10-04T08:29:44ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)Russian Journal of Linguistics2687-00882686-80242023-09-0127352154210.22363/2687-0088-3504820860The image of Russia through animal metaphors: A diachronic case study of American media discourseOlga A. Solopova0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4170-7267Don Nilsen1https://orcid.org/0009-0003-4620-8181Alleen Nilsen2https://orcid.org/0009-0001-4404-7084South Ural State University (national research university)Arizona State UniversityArizona State UniversityThe image of a country has a critical impact on the degree of its political, economic and cultural influence in the world. This indicates a need to understand various perceptions of a country that exist among other nations and mechanisms of their formation and change in an ever-shifting world. This qualitative case study seeks to examine the changing nature of wild animal metaphors employed to model the image of Russia in American media discourse in the XIX-XXI centuries. The study is limited by two source domains, namely, the beast and the bear. They were analyzed within particular contexts: American English, culture and media discourse. The research data were drawn from dictionaries and corpora. The dictionaries included etymological and explanatory entries, as well as those covering idioms, symbols, and metaphors. The corpora research data were collected from the Corpus of Contemporary American English and Chronicling America, a collection of historic digitalized texts. A total of 218 metaphors were selected from 4929 texts. The metaphors were studied through lexicographic, conceptual metaphor, culture-specific, corpus, discourse, and diachronic methods. The findings of this study suggest that the two metaphors “Russia is a beast” and “Russia is a bear” are frequently used in realizing the strategy of ‘othering’ in XXI century American media discourse. Still, their meanings allowed for variation and modification in the periods of the two countries’ amity and cooperation. In the XIX century and in the years of US-Soviet alliance in WWII the metaphors could evoke positive images of Russia, thus, realizing the strategy of ‘bridging’ or ‘belonging’. The contribution of this study has been to confirm that, whatever metaphorical projections exist in language and culture, historical factors determine choices in any sample of discourse. This could be important for understanding the mechanisms involved in modeling the image of modern Russia in foreign media discourses.https://journals.rudn.ru/linguistics/article/viewFile/36168/22587conceptual metaphoranimal source domaincountry imageimage of russiaamerican media discoursediachronic approach
spellingShingle Olga A. Solopova
Don Nilsen
Alleen Nilsen
The image of Russia through animal metaphors: A diachronic case study of American media discourse
Russian Journal of Linguistics
conceptual metaphor
animal source domain
country image
image of russia
american media discourse
diachronic approach
title The image of Russia through animal metaphors: A diachronic case study of American media discourse
title_full The image of Russia through animal metaphors: A diachronic case study of American media discourse
title_fullStr The image of Russia through animal metaphors: A diachronic case study of American media discourse
title_full_unstemmed The image of Russia through animal metaphors: A diachronic case study of American media discourse
title_short The image of Russia through animal metaphors: A diachronic case study of American media discourse
title_sort image of russia through animal metaphors a diachronic case study of american media discourse
topic conceptual metaphor
animal source domain
country image
image of russia
american media discourse
diachronic approach
url https://journals.rudn.ru/linguistics/article/viewFile/36168/22587
work_keys_str_mv AT olgaasolopova theimageofrussiathroughanimalmetaphorsadiachroniccasestudyofamericanmediadiscourse
AT donnilsen theimageofrussiathroughanimalmetaphorsadiachroniccasestudyofamericanmediadiscourse
AT alleennilsen theimageofrussiathroughanimalmetaphorsadiachroniccasestudyofamericanmediadiscourse
AT olgaasolopova imageofrussiathroughanimalmetaphorsadiachroniccasestudyofamericanmediadiscourse
AT donnilsen imageofrussiathroughanimalmetaphorsadiachroniccasestudyofamericanmediadiscourse
AT alleennilsen imageofrussiathroughanimalmetaphorsadiachroniccasestudyofamericanmediadiscourse