Metafore rischiose: la pandemia come guerra (o la guerra come pandemia?)

Titolo Rivista SOCIOLOGIA E RICERCA SOCIALE
Autori/Curatori Fabrizio Battistelli
Anno di pubblicazione 2025 Fascicolo 2024/134
Lingua Italiano Numero pagine 16 P. 5-20 Dimensione file 210 KB
DOI 10.3280/SR2024-134001
Il DOI è il codice a barre della proprietà intellettuale: per saperne di più clicca qui

Qui sotto puoi vedere in anteprima la prima pagina di questo articolo.

Se questo articolo ti interessa, lo puoi acquistare (e scaricare in formato pdf) seguendo le facili indicazioni per acquistare il download credit. Acquista Download Credits per scaricare questo Articolo in formato PDF

Anteprima articolo

FrancoAngeli è membro della Publishers International Linking Association, Inc (PILA)associazione indipendente e non profit per facilitare (attraverso i servizi tecnologici implementati da CrossRef.org) l’accesso degli studiosi ai contenuti digitali nelle pubblicazioni professionali e scientifiche

  1. G. Agamben (1995), (Homo sacer). Il potere sovrano e la nuda vita, Torino, Einaudi.
  2. G. Agamben (2003), Stato di eccezione, Torino, Bollati Boringhieri.
  3. G. Agamben (2021), A che punto siamo? L’epidemia come politica, Macerata, Quodlibet.
  4. B.R. Bates (2020), «The (In) Appropriateness of the War Metaphor in Response to Sars-Covid-2: A Rapid Analysis of Donald J. Trump’s Rhetoric», Frontiers in Communication, sec. Health Communication, 201, pp. 1-12.
  5. F. Battistelli (2024), «The coronavirus pandemic: Danger, Risk or Threat?», European Journal of Cultural and Political Sociology, 2, 2, pp. 212-30.
  6. F. Battistelli, M.G. Galantino (2019), «Dangers, risks and threats: An alternative conceptualization to the catch-all concept of risk», Current Sociology, 67, 1, pp. 64-78.
  7. F. Battistelli, M.G. Galantino (2020), Sociologia e politica del coronavirus. Tra opinioni e paure, Milano, FrancoAngeli [Open Access: http://ojs.francoangeli.it/_omp/index.php/oa/catalog/book/569].
  8. Z. Bauman (2006), Liquid Fear, New York, John Wiley and Sons; tr. it. Paura liquida, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2008.
  9. G. Boccaccio (1579), La Theseide. D’ottaua rima nuovamente ridotta in prosa per Nicolao Granucci di Lucca, Lucca, Vincenzo Busdraghi.
  10. M. Bondi, J.J. Nocella (2022), Risk and Threat During the Covid-19 Pandemic: A micro-synchronic Perspective, in E. Iannelli, R. Mocini, J. Turnbull (eds.), The research-practice interface in ESP: past, present and future perspectives. A festschrift in honour of Rita Saloi, Cambridge Scholars, pp. 70-93.
  11. B. Bratton (2021), The Revenge of the Real. Politics for a Post-Pandemic World, London-New York, Verso.
  12. A. Burni, E. Tamaki (2021), «Populist Communication suring the Covid-19 Pandemic: the Case of Brazil’s President Bolsonaro», Partecipazione e Conflitto, 14, 1, pp. 113-31.
  13. B. Buzan, O. Waever, J. De Wilde (1998), Security: A New Framework Analysis, Boulder-London, Lynne Rienner.
  14. J. Carter, H.L. Ondercin, G. Palmer (2021), «Guns, Butter, and Growth: The Consequences of Military Spending Reconsidered», Political Research Quarterly, 74, 1, pp. 148-65.
  15. E. Castro Seixas (2021), «War Metaphor in Political Communication on Covid-19», Frontiers in Sociology, 5, pp. 1-11?.
  16. J. Charteris-Black (2006), Politicians and Rhetoric. The Persuasive Power of Metaphor, Basingstoke, Palgrave MacMillan.
  17. L.A. Coser (1967), The Functions of Social Conflict, Abingdon Oxon, Routledge; tr. it. La funzione del conflitto sociale, Milano, Feltrinelli, 1967.
  18. G. Delanty (2020), «Six Political Philosophies in Search of a Virus: Critical Perspectives on the Coronavirus Pandemic», Leqs Paper, 156, May, pp. 1-16.
  19. G. Delanty (ed.) (2021), Pandemics, Politics, and Society: Critical Perspectives on the Covid-19 Crisis, Berlin-Boston, de Gruyter.
  20. M. Döring, B. Nerlich, (2022), «Framing the 2020 Coronavirus Pandemic: Metaphors, Images and Symbols», Metaphor and Symbol on Covid-19, 37, pp. 71-5.
  21. F. Farruggia (2020), «C’era una volta un virus. Metafore e narrazioni della pandemia», Democrazia e sicurezza, 10, 2, pp. 230-46.
  22. F. Ferrari (2007), «Metaphor at work in the analysis of political discourse: investigating a “preventive war” persuasion strategy», Discourse & Society, 18, 5, pp. 603-25.
  23. S.J. Flusberg, T. Matlock, P.H. Thibodeau (2018), «War metaphors in public discourse», Metaphor & Symbols, 33, 1, pp. 1-18.
  24. M.G. Galantino (2010), La società della sicurezza. La costruzione sociale della sicurezza in situazioni di emergenza, Milano, FrancoAngeli.
  25. M. Hanne (2022), «How we escape capture by the “war” metaphor for Covid-19», Metaphor and Symbol, 37, 2, pp. 88-100.
  26. M.B. Hesse (1980), The Explanatory Function of Metaphor, Models and Analogies in Science, Paris, University of Notre Dame Press; tr. it. La funzione esplicativa della metafora. Modelli e analogie nella scienza, Milano, Feltrinelli, 1980.
  27. J. Ho (2019), «An earthquake or a category 4 financial storm? A corpus study of disaster metaphors in the media framing in the 2008 financial crisis», Text & Talk, 39, 2, pp. 191-212.
  28. G. Holton (1986), Metaphors in Science and Education. The Advancement of Science and Its Burdens, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
  29. R. Iannone, R. Gurashi (2023), «The Pandemic and Sustainable Peace. A combination yet to be understood», Salute e società, 1, pp. 116-34, DOI: 10.3280/SES2023-001009
  30. M. Ikegami, W. Zijian (2023), «Does military expenditure crowd out health-care spending?», Quality & Quantity, 57, pp. 1657-72.
  31. A. Islentyeva (2020), «On the front line in the fight against the virus: conceputal framing and war patterns in political discourse», Yearbook of the German Cognitive Linguistics Association, 8, 1, pp. 157-80,
  32. H. Janusch, W. Mucha, J. Schwaholz, A. Reich Wen, D. Lorgerg (eds.) (2023), Turning Points. Challenges for western Democracies in the 21st Century, Berlin-Boston, De Gruyter.
  33. J. Jiang (2021), «A question of human rights or human left? The “people’s war against Covid-19” under the “gridded management” system in China», Journal of Contemporary China, 31, 136, pp. 491-504.
  34. T.S. Kuhn (1983), Le metafore nella scienza, in R. Boyd, T.S. Kuhn, La metafora nella scienza, Milano, Feltrinelli.
  35. G. Lakoff (1995), «Metaphor, morality and politics, or, why conservatives have left liberals in the dust», Social Research, 62, 2, pp. 177-213.
  36. G. Lakoff (2002), Moral Politics: What Conservatives know that Liberals don’t, Chicago, Chicago University Press.
  37. G. Lakoff, M. Johnson (1980), Metaphors we live by, Chicago, Chicago University Press.
  38. S. Luraghi, P. Stringa (2024), Comunicare la crisi. Metafore e cornici concettuali fra pandemia, guerra e immigrazione, Roma, Carocci.
  39. R. Madrueño (2023), The emergent discourse on global threats and risks: An analysis of the contemporary empirical evidence extant in scientific journals, in H. Janusch et al., Turning Points. Challenges for western Democracies in the 21st Century, Berlin-Boston, De Gruyter.
  40. A. Marchesi, N. De Luigi (2002), «Risk perception and Covid-19 during lockdown: evidence from an italian sample», Italian Sociological Review, 12, 2, pp. 545-63.
  41. V. Martìn de la Rosa (2007), «A global war against avian influenza», Revista Electrónica de Lingüìstica Aplicada, 6, pp. 16-30.
  42. B. Mortara Garavelli (2010), Il parlar figurato. Manualetto di figure retoriche, Roma, Carocci.
  43. J.E. Mueller (1970), War, Presidents and Public Opinion, New York, Wiley.
  44. A. Musolff (2016), Political Metaphor Analysis. Discourse and Scenarios, London-Oxford-New York-New Delhi-Sidney, Bloomsburry.
  45. A. Musolff A. (2022), «World-beating pandemic response: ironical, sarcastic and satirical use of war and competion metaphors in the context of Covid-19 pandemic», Metaphor and Symbol, 37, 2, pp. 76-87.
  46. T. Oatley (2015), A political economy of american hegemony: buildups, booms, and busts, New York, Cambridge University Press.
  47. J. Perrez, M. Reuchamps, P.H. Thibodeau (eds.) (2019), Variation in Political Metaphor, Amsterdam, John Benjamin.
  48. K. Power, P. Crosthwaite (2022), «Constructing Covid-19: A Corpus-informed analysis of prime ministerial crisis response communication by gender», Discourse & Society, 33, 3, pp. 411-37.
  49. L.J. Rather, J.B. Frerichs (1972), «On the use of military metaphor in western medical literature: the bellum contra morbum of Thomas Campanella (1568-1639)», Clio Medica, 7, 3, pp. 201-8.
  50. B. Renzi, M.D. Cotton, G. Napolitano, R. Barkemeyer (2017), «Rebirth, devastation and sickness: analyzing the role of metaphor in media discourses of nuclear power», Environmental Communication, 11, 5, pp. 624-40.
  51. J.M. Sabucedo, M. Alzate, D. Hur (2020), «Covid-19 and the methapor of war», International Journal of Social Psychology, 35, 3, pp. 618-24.
  52. T.C. Schelling (1960), The Strategy of Conflict, Cambridge, Hardware; tr. it. La strategia del conflitto, Milano, Mondadori, 2006.
  53. C. Schmitt (1932), Der Begriff des Politischen, Berlin, Duncker and Humblot; tr. it. a cura di G. Miglio, P. Schiera, Le categorie del politico. Saggi di teoria politica, Bologna, il Mulino, 1972.
  54. E. Semino (2021), «“Not soldier but fire-fighters” – Metaphors and Covid-19», Health Communication, 31, 1, pp. 50-8.
  55. J. Shu, Y. Shi, J. Guo, Q. Cai (2021), «Metaphor in Political Discourse: A Corpus Based Analysis of China Fighting against Covid-19», World Scientific Research Journal, 7, 7, pp. 221-33.
  56. S. Sontag (1978), Illness as Metaphorand Aids and Its Metaphor, London-New York, Penguin; tr. it. Malattia come metafora e l’Aids e le sue metafore, Milano, Nottetempo, 2020.
  57. H. Steinert (2003), «The indispensable metaphor of war: on populist politics and the contradictions of the state’s monopoly of force», Theoretical Criminology, 7, 3, pp. 265-91.
  58. H. Tsoukas (1993), «Analogical reasoning and knowledge generation in organization theory», Organization Studies, 14, 3, pp. 323-46.
  59. J.W. Underhill (2011), Creating Worldviews. Metaphor Ideology and Language, Edinburgh, University Press.
  60. Undp (2022), Special Report. New threats to human security in the Anthropocene Demanding greater solidarity, New York, Undesa.
  61. A. Wagener (2020), «Crushed by the wheels of industry: war, heroes, and domestic recolonization in the time of Covid-19», Postdigital Science and Education, 2, pp. 576-80.
  62. P. Wicke, M.M. Bolognesi (2021), «Covid-19 discourse on Twitter: How the topics, sentiments, subjectivity, and figurative frames changed over time», Frontiers in Communication, 6, pp. 1-20,
  63. R. Wodak (2021), «Crisis communication and crisis management during Covid-19», Global Discourse, 11, 3, pp. 329-53.
  64. W.H. Zeng, K. Ahrens (2023), «Corpus-based metaphorical framing analysis: war, metaphors in Hong Kong public discourse», Metaphor and Symbol, 38, 3, pp. 254-74.
  65. C. Zhang, Z. Lin, S. Jin (2022), «What else besides war: deliberate metaphors framing Covid-19 in Chinese online newspaper editorials», Metaphor and Symbol, 37, 2, pp. 114-26.

Fabrizio Battistelli, Metafore rischiose: la pandemia come guerra (o la guerra come pandemia?) in "SOCIOLOGIA E RICERCA SOCIALE " 134/2024, pp 5-20, DOI: 10.3280/SR2024-134001