Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 965489
Some metaphorical and metonymic effects in health communication: From the epistemic to the metacommunicative
Some metaphorical and metonymic effects in health communication: From the epistemic to the metacommunicative // Jezik i njegovi učinci / Stolac, Diana ; Vlastelić, Anastazija (ur.).
Zagreb: Srednja Europa ; Hrvatsko društvo za primijenjenu lingvistiku (HDPL), 2018. str. 1-21 (plenarno, recenziran, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), znanstveni)
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Naslov
Some metaphorical and metonymic effects in health communication: From the epistemic to the metacommunicative
Autori
Brdar, Mario
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u zbornicima skupova, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), znanstveni
Izvornik
Jezik i njegovi učinci
/ Stolac, Diana ; Vlastelić, Anastazija - Zagreb : Srednja Europa ; Hrvatsko društvo za primijenjenu lingvistiku (HDPL), 2018, 1-21
ISBN
978-953-7963-86-6
Skup
31st International Conference of the Croatian Applied Linguistics Society
Mjesto i datum
Rijeka, Hrvatska, 04.05.2017. - 06.05.2017
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Plenarno
Vrsta recenzije
Recenziran
Ključne riječi
health communication ; language effect ; figurative language ; metaphor ; metonymy ; eponym
Sažetak
Health practitioners and patients alike make ample use of figurative language, especially conceptual metaphor and metonymy, while discussing all kinds of medical conditions and treatments. Metaphors and metonymies can play a significant epistemic role in bridging the knowledge gap between health practitioners and patients. I illustrate this on the example of the alternate use of two metaphors in endocrinology, specifically in talking about the endocrine system and the role of the pituitary gland, as well as on a cluster of conceptual metaphors used in transplantology. Figurative expressions can, however, also exhibit some social, i.e. metacommunicative functions. They can be used euphemistically, to cover-up some unpleasant facts, and in that case metaphor can hardly be said to make possible new insights—it actually comes quite close to metonymy in providing alternative means of referring to a phenomenon in a more or less offensive or palatable way. But even more importantly, an understanding of both metaphor and metonymy can have an even more important social function in helping forge closer links between health practitioners and patients. As I demonstrate on the same pair of metaphors used in endocrinology, health practitioners can (consciously) modulate their metaphorization patterns in order to accommodate patients, while patients on their part can also over time adopt some non-layman metaphors. All this “metaphor sharing” shortens the distance between the two groups on the institutional ladder. A similar process can be observed in the use of various medical eponyms, where full eponymic expressions tend to characterize formal encounters, while the use of elliptical, metonymic eponyms, is indicative of informal exchanges of equals or near-equals. Studying such patterns of the effects of figurative expressions in the interaction between health practitioners and patients is of immense practical value as its better understanding can facilitate their communication and increase patient compliance and adherence to therapy, and thus enhance the efficiency of health systems.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Filologija