Semino Elena, Demjén Zsófia, Demmen Jane, Koller Veronika, Payne Sheila, Hardie Andrew, Rayson Paul
Department of Linguistics and English Language, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK.
Department of Applied Linguistics and English Language, The Open University, Milton Keynes, UK.
BMJ Support Palliat Care. 2017 Mar;7(1):60-66. doi: 10.1136/bmjspcare-2014-000785. Epub 2015 Mar 5.
To compare the frequencies with which patients with cancer and health professionals use Violence and Journey metaphors when writing online; and to investigate the use of these metaphors by patients with cancer, in view of critiques of war-related metaphors for cancer and the adoption of the notion of the 'cancer journey' in UK policy documents.
Computer-assisted quantitative and qualitative study of two data sets totalling 753 302 words.
A UK-based online forum for patients with cancer (500 134 words) and a UK-based website for health professionals (253 168 words).
56 patients with cancer writing online between 2007 and 2012; and 307 health professionals writing online between 2008 and 2013.
Patients with cancer use both Violence metaphors and Journey metaphors approximately 1.5 times per 1000 words to describe their illness experience. In similar online writing, health professionals use each type of metaphor significantly less frequently. Patients' Violence metaphors can express and reinforce negative feelings, but they can also be used in empowering ways. Journey metaphors can express and reinforce positive feelings, but can also be used in disempowering ways.
Violence metaphors are not by default negative and Journey metaphors are not by default a positive means of conceptualising cancer. A blanket rejection of Violence metaphors and an uncritical promotion of Journey metaphors would deprive patients of the positive functions of the former and ignore the potential pitfalls of the latter. Instead, greater awareness of the function (empowering or disempowering) of patients' metaphor use can lead to more effective communication about the experience of cancer.
比较癌症患者和医疗专业人员在网上写作时使用暴力隐喻和旅程隐喻的频率;鉴于对癌症相关战争隐喻的批评以及英国政策文件中采用的“癌症旅程”概念,调查癌症患者对这些隐喻的使用情况。
对两个数据集进行计算机辅助的定量和定性研究,数据集总计753302个单词。
一个英国的癌症患者在线论坛(500134个单词)和一个英国的医疗专业人员网站(253168个单词)。
2007年至2012年间在网上写作的56名癌症患者;以及2008年至2013年间在网上写作的307名医疗专业人员。
癌症患者每1000个单词中使用暴力隐喻和旅程隐喻来描述其疾病经历的频率约为1.5次。在类似的网上写作中,医疗专业人员使用每种隐喻的频率明显更低。患者的暴力隐喻可以表达和强化负面情绪,但也可以以增强力量的方式使用。旅程隐喻可以表达和强化积极情绪,但也可以以削弱力量的方式使用。
暴力隐喻并非默认就是负面的,旅程隐喻也并非默认就是概念化癌症的积极方式。一概拒绝暴力隐喻和不加批判地推广旅程隐喻会使患者失去前者的积极功能,并忽视后者的潜在缺陷。相反,更多地了解患者使用隐喻的功能(增强力量或削弱力量)可以促进关于癌症经历的更有效沟通。