Cover not available

Multimodal Metaphor and Metonymy in Advertising

HardboundAvailable
ISBN 9789027209863 | EUR 95.00 | USD 143.00
 
e-Book
ISBN 9789027264671 | EUR 95.00 | USD 143.00
 
Metaphor and metonymy appeal to us because they evoke mental images in unique but still recognisable ways. The potential for figurative thought exists in everyone, and it pervades our everyday social interactions. In particular, advertising offers countless opportunities to explore the way in which people think creatively through metaphor and metonymy. The thorough analysis of a corpus of 210 authentic printed advertisements shows the central role of multimodal metaphor, metonymy, and their patterns of interaction, at the heart of advertising campaigns. This book is the first in-depth research monograph to bring together qualitative and quantitative evidence of metaphor-metonymy combinations in real multimodal discourse. It combines detailed case study analyses with corpus-based analysis and psycholinguistic enquiry to provide the reader with a prismatic approach to the topic of figurative language in multimodal advertising. Besides its theoretical contribution to the field of multimodal figurative language, this monograph has a wide number of practical applications due to its focus on advertising and the communicative impact of creative messages on consumers. This book will pave the way for further qualitative and quantitative research on the ways in which figurative language shapes multimodal discourse, and how it relates to our everyday creative thinking.
[Figurative Thought and Language, 2] 2017.  vii, 232 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 20 November 2017
Table of Contents
“This volume constitutes a much-needed and valuable contribution to the literature on figurative communication in advertising. It provides astonishing breath of coverage and contains original insights into the ways in which metaphor and metonymy interact in advertisements to create and convey the desired messages. It reports new findings, all of which are based on extensive studies of authentic data. Consideration is also given to cross-cultural variation, whose importance is increasingly acknowledged in the field. The book will be essential reading for anyone interested in the ways in which figurative communication can and should be employed in advertising. It will be of significant interest to both academics and professionals.”
“In a highly innovative way, this book combines empirical and qualitative analytical tools and integrates insights from various disciplines to cast light on a multifaceted (and by no means uncontroversial) area of communication theory: the role of complex figurative thinking in multimodal communication. This is certainly a ground-breaking study with important implications for communication studies both at the theoretical and applied levels.”
“Multimodal metaphor and metonymy have rightly become a major focus of research within the multidisciplinary world of figurative language studies. Paula Perez Sobrino’s new book offers several important methodological tools for exploring the creation of multimodal metaphors in advertising. Her analyses of various metaphoric and metonymic complexes, especially as seen in cross-cultural contexts, are compelling and emphasize the significance of different cognitive operations in figurative thinking and language. This volume presents practical guidelines for effectively using metaphor and metonymy in advertising and represents an excellent case study of how cognitive linguistics can illuminate critical features of multimodal creativity in action.”
“Why should one spend some time reading this book? First, from the opening page and onwards, Pérez-Sobrino takes you by the hand and leads you carefully and pedagogically through a mosaic and maze of complexities, metaphors and metonymies (and metaphor and metonymy spawns of different kinds), and colorful and intriguing advertisements. The language is easy to follow but never simple. Second, the role of metonymy is highlighted throughout, giving a broader picture of figurative language and its rich characteristics, especially from a multimodal perspective [...]. Third, it is a book encompassing linguistics and advertisement, and as such, it provides a much appreciated, and concrete, link between theory and practice.”
Cited by (95)

Cited by 95 other publications

Bolognesi, Marianna, Francesca Strik-Lievers, Bo Yao & Francesca M. M. Citron
2026. Metaphor and multisensoriality drive appreciation in print advertising: an experimental study of visual and linguistic synaesthetic metaphors. Language and Cognition 18 DOI logo
Hatamzadeh-Esfahani, Somayeh & Reza Kazemian
2026. Hair or fist. Pragmatics and Society DOI logo
Huang, Ding & Jiajin Xu
2026. Extending local grammar to multimodal meaning-making: a case study of conflict resolution in picture books. Text & Talk 46:2  pp. 167 ff. DOI logo
Pilyarchuk, Kateryna
2026. Conceptualizing the Aggressor as an Animal: Metaphors, Memes, and the Russo-Ukrainian War. Metaphor and Symbol 41:1  pp. 39 ff. DOI logo
Colston, Herbert L.
2025. The big figurative picture. In What makes a Figure [Figurative Thought and Language, 19],  pp. 14 ff. DOI logo
Del Castillo Aira, Itxaso & Andoni Iturbe Tolosa
2025. Mucho más que atrezo. grafica 13:26  pp. 377 ff. DOI logo
Forceville, Charles & Alan Cienki
2025. Multimodal Metaphor. In The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Fuoli, Matteo & Samantha Ford
2025. One Hundred Ways to Resist Corporate Branding: Figurative Subversion in Visual and Multimodal Communication. Metaphor and Symbol 40:3  pp. 222 ff. DOI logo
Gerothanasi, Stamatia, Nina Julich-Warpakowski & Paula Pérez-Sobrino
2025. Multimodal meaning-making in opera. In What makes a Figure [Figurative Thought and Language, 19],  pp. 98 ff. DOI logo
Hidalgo-Downing, Laura
2025. Creative visual and multimodal metonymy in non-commercial advertisements on substance use. Metaphor and the Social World 15:2  pp. 288 ff. DOI logo
Jensen, Thomas Wiben
2025. Moral metaphor, metonymic causation. Metaphor and the Social World 15:2  pp. 242 ff. DOI logo
Johansson Falck, Marlene & Thomas Wiben Jensen
2025. Embodied, social, and creative dimensions of metonymy. Metaphor and the Social World 15:2  pp. 185 ff. DOI logo
Martynyuk, Alla & Iryna Nabokova
2025. Representation of Donald Trump in Metaphtonymic Internet Memes as an Instrument of Socio-Political Influence. The Journal of V N Karazin Kharkiv National University Series Foreign Philology Methods of Foreign Language Teaching  pp. 35 ff. DOI logo
O’Dowd, Niamh A.
2025. The Framing Effects of Metaphor and Metonymy in Multimodal Campaigns About Plastic Pollution: A Solutions-Oriented and Emotion-Oriented Study. Metaphor and Symbol 40:1  pp. 76 ff. DOI logo
O’Dowd, Niamh A.
2025. Looking back on the metaphor-metonymy divide. Metaphor and the Social World 15:2  pp. 205 ff. DOI logo
Peña-Cervel, Mª Sandra
2025. Sources of incongruity in advertising. In What makes a Figure [Figurative Thought and Language, 19],  pp. 66 ff. DOI logo
Türker, Ebru & Jae Hyun Park
2025. Multimodal Metaphoric Creativity, Framing, and Recontextualization in Education Discourse: University Advertisements in South Korea. Metaphor and Symbol 40:2  pp. 153 ff. DOI logo
Xu, Jiaqi & Zi Yang
2025. Advertising fragrance through visual and audible information: a multimodal metaphor analysis of perfume commercials. Semiotica 2025:263  pp. 215 ff. DOI logo
Zhang, Shan
Zurru, Elisabetta
2025. Investigating the Online Communicative Practices of an Indian Grassroots Environmental Movement Through Ecostylistics: The Case of #SaveHasdeoForest . Il Tolomeo :1 DOI logo
Żukowska, Aleksandra
2025. Autorskie narzędzie analizy metafory wizualnej w badaniach plakatu społecznego. Studia Medioznawcze 26:4 DOI logo
Baş, Melike
2024. Multimodal Metaphors and Metonymies in Turkish Airlines’ Advertisements. Dilbilim Araştırmaları Dergisi 35:1  pp. 89 ff. DOI logo
Baş, Melike
2024. The conceptual nature of the Turkish emotion term ‘Heyecan’. Language and Cognition 16:3  pp. 666 ff. DOI logo
Butler, Robert
2024. Call for contributions to a special issue on multimodal representations of authority in discourse. Multimodality & Society DOI logo
Butler, Robert
2025. Editorial. Multimodality & Society 5:3  pp. 275 ff. DOI logo
Liu, Yufeng & Dechao Li
2024. Multimodal metaphor (re)framing: a critical analysis of the promotional image of China’s Hubei Province in the post-pandemic era on new media. Social Semiotics 34:2  pp. 269 ff. DOI logo
Llopis-García, Reyes
2024. Applied Cognitive Linguistics and L2 Instruction, DOI logo
Meleshchenko, Olga
2024. Multimodal metaphtonymy in internet memes: A response to Donald Trump’s mug shot on X (formerly twitter) as a case study. Cognition, Communication, Discourse :28  pp. 78 ff. DOI logo
Nikolaienko, Valeriia
2024. Mentions explicites de la métaphore dans les récits de rêves anglophones et francophones : une perspective cognitive. ILCEA 53 DOI logo
Nikolaienko, Valeriia
2024. Експліцитні метафори в англомовних та франкомовних переказах сновидінь: когнітивна перспектива. ILCEA 53 DOI logo
Tseng, Ming-Yu
2024. ‘Just Like Pandemic Prevention’: The Semiotic Flow That Interweaves Multimodality, Metaphor, and Narrativity. Metaphor and Symbol 39:2  pp. 110 ff. DOI logo
Wang, Dan
2024. Review of Benczes & Szelid (2022): Visual Metaphors. Metaphor and the Social World 14:2  pp. 342 ff. DOI logo
Wei, Xixi
2024. Multimodal metaphors in a Sino-British co-produced documentary. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications 11:1 DOI logo
胡, 艾敏
2024. A Study on the Multimodal Metaphor Strategies of Sichuan Baijiu International Promotion Advertisements Driven by Food Culture. Modern Linguistics 12:09  pp. 321 ff. DOI logo
胡, 艾敏
2024. A Study on Multimodal Metaphors and Metonymies in Video Advertising—A Case Study of an Advertisement in Luzhou Laojiao. Modern Linguistics 12:08  pp. 740 ff. DOI logo
Hidalgo-Downing, Laura & Niamh A. O’Dowd
2023. Code Red for Humanity: Multimodal Metaphor and Metonymy in Noncommercial Advertisements on Environmental Awareness and Activism. Metaphor and Symbol 38:3  pp. 231 ff. DOI logo
Juzelėnienė, Saulė & Aistė Stvolaitė
2023. Multimodal Representations of Lithuanian Brands: The Case of “Džiugas”, “Rūta” and “Pieno žvaigždės”. Respectus Philologicus :44 (49)  pp. 25 ff. DOI logo
Pan, Molly Xie
2023. Metaphorical and multimodal representation of autism in Chinese video public service announcements: Lonely twinkling. Language and Health 1:1  pp. 67 ff. DOI logo
Pan, Molly Xie & Dennis Tay
2023. Individual differences in identifying creative metaphors from video Ads. Metaphor and the Social World 13:2  pp. 221 ff. DOI logo
Pérez Sobrino, Paula & Samantha Ford
2023. What counts as a multimodal metaphor and metonymy? Evolution of inter-rater reliability across rounds of annotation. Language and Cognition 15:4  pp. 786 ff. DOI logo
Razzaq, Ali, Wei Shao & Sara Quach
2023. Towards an understanding of meme marketing: conceptualisation and empirical evidence. Journal of Marketing Management 39:7-8  pp. 670 ff. DOI logo
Stampoulidis, Georgios & Marianna Bolognesi
2023. Bringing metaphors back to the streets: a corpus-based study for the identification and interpretation of rhetorical figures in street art. Visual Communication 22:2  pp. 243 ff. DOI logo
Tang, Ping & Yi Sun
2023. From a war of defense to conventional wars. Review of Cognitive Linguistics 21:2  pp. 444 ff. DOI logo
Voyakina, E. Yu. & M. N. Makeeva
2023. Digital economic discourse in the tropeic dimension (on the material of small plot-based discursive forms). Key Issues of Contemporary Linguistics :6  pp. 6 ff. DOI logo
Xiang, Mingjian
2023. Book Review: Paula Pérez Sobrino, Jeannette Littlemore and Samantha Ford, Unpacking Creativity: The Power of Figurative Communication in Advertising. Discourse Studies 25:1  pp. 141 ff. DOI logo
Yuan, Xiaoben
2023. Metaphors and metonymies in the multimodal discourse of whaling. Metaphor and the Social World 13:2  pp. 293 ff. DOI logo
Yuan, Xiaoben
2025. ‘Tiny canvases, big tales’: deciphering the concept of tax through Japanese children’s postcard drawings. Visual Communication DOI logo
Yuan, Xiaoben
2025. Various ways of supporting society. Cognitive Linguistic Studies 12:2  pp. 322 ff. DOI logo
Zhao, Xiufeng & Yuxin Wu
2023. Oil as narcotic or as medicine: the DISEASE metaphor in political cartoons on energy crisis. Language and Semiotic Studies 9:1  pp. 79 ff. DOI logo
Brdar-Szabó, Rita & Mario Brdar
2022. Metonymy in multimodal discourse, or. In Figurativity and Human Ecology [Figurative Thought and Language, 17],  pp. 209 ff. DOI logo
Gibbs Jr., Raymond W.
2022. Metaphorical experience. Review of Cognitive Linguistics 20:1  pp. 7 ff. DOI logo
Martynyuk, Alla & Olga Meleshchenko
Pérez-Sobrino, Paula, Elena Semino, Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano, Veronika Koller & Inés Olza
2022. Acting like a Hedgehog in Times of Pandemic: Metaphorical Creativity in the #reframecovid Collection. Metaphor and Symbol 37:2  pp. 127 ff. DOI logo
Virág, Ágnes
Zibin, Aseel
2022. Monomodal and multimodal metaphors in editorial cartoons on the coronavirus by Jordanian cartoonists. Linguistics Vanguard 8:1  pp. 383 ff. DOI logo
Colston, Herbert L., Carina Rasse & Albert Katz
2021. Back to the Poem: A Call for A Special Issue on the Poetics of Metaphor. Metaphor and Symbol 36:2  pp. 61 ff. DOI logo
Ford, Samantha, Jeannette Littlemore & David Houghton
2021. Got a Spark with Brook? Engaging Consumers in a Sexual Health Campaign through the Use of Creative (Metaphorical) Double Entendres. Metaphor and Symbol 36:4  pp. 207 ff. DOI logo
Gibbs, Raymond W.
2021. Metaphors in the flesh: Metaphorical pantomimes in sports celebrations. Cognitive Linguistics 32:1  pp. 67 ff. DOI logo
Herrero-Ruiz, Javier
2021. Interpretations based on delayed-domain (dis)appearance in printed advertising. Review of Cognitive Linguistics 19:2  pp. 299 ff. DOI logo
Ho, Janet
2021. Heroes or criminals: discursive representation of cancer patients in health awareness advertisements. Visual Communication 20:2  pp. 159 ff. DOI logo
Ikere, Zaiga, Ilze Oļehnoviča & Solveiga Liepa
2021. Non-Commercial Advertisements: Multimodal Metaphor, Metonymy and Conceptual Blending at Work. Research in Language 19:3  pp. 305 ff. DOI logo
Li, Ke & Huichao Zhu
2021. Power and gender. Chinese Language and Discourse. An International and Interdisciplinary Journal 12:2  pp. 238 ff. DOI logo
Schmitt, Rudolf
2021. Multimodalität und die szenische Erweiterung der Metaphernanalyse. In Begegnen, Bewegen und Synergien stiften,  pp. 231 ff. DOI logo
Zhang, Cun
2021. The Sino–US trade war in political cartoons: A synthesis of semiotic, cognitive, and cultural perspectives. Intercultural Pragmatics 18:4  pp. 469 ff. DOI logo
Zlatev, Jordan, Göran Jacobsson & Liina Paju
Abdel-Raheem, Ahmed
2020. Moral metaphor and gender in Arab visual culture: Debunking Western myths. Social Semiotics 30:5  pp. 715 ff. DOI logo
Bolognesi, Marianna & Francesca Strik Lievers
2020. How language and image construct synaesthetic metaphors in print advertising. Visual Communication 19:4  pp. 431 ff. DOI logo
Bort-Mir, Lorena, Marianna Bolognesi & Susan Ghaffaryan
2020. Cross-cultural interpretation of filmic metaphors: A think-aloud experiment. Intercultural Pragmatics 17:4  pp. 389 ff. DOI logo
Cavazzana, Alessandro & Marianna Bolognesi
2020. Uncanny resemblance. Cognitive Linguistic Studies 7:1  pp. 31 ff. DOI logo
Cavazzana, Alessandro & Marianna Bolognesi
2022. Uncanny resemblance. In Visual Metaphors [Benjamins Current Topics, 124],  pp. 33 ff. DOI logo
Dalamu, Taofeek O.
2020. Investigating multilingual contexts in the Nigerian advertising space: A domain of intellectual stimulation. Crossroads. A Journal of English Studies :29(2)  pp. 4 ff. DOI logo
Dalamu, Taofeek O. & Alfred Fatuase
2020. Ideological Reality in Advertising: A Functional Approach to Nigerian Breweries’ Product Advertisements. SSRN Electronic Journal DOI logo
Guan, Yue & Charles Forceville
2020. Making cross-cultural meaning in five Chinese promotion clips: Metonymies and metaphors. Intercultural Pragmatics 17:2  pp. 123 ff. DOI logo
Hetmański, Marek
2020. Visual metaphor and its narrative function. Cognitive Linguistic Studies 7:1  pp. 141 ff. DOI logo
Hetmański, Marek
2022. Visual metaphor and its narrative function. In Visual Metaphors [Benjamins Current Topics, 124],  pp. 147 ff. DOI logo
Huang, Haiyan, Jan Blommaert & Ellen Van Praet
2020. “OH MY GOD! BUY IT!” a Multimodal Discourse Analysis of the Discursive Strategies Used by Chinese Ecommerce Live-Streamer Austin Li. In HCI International 2020 – Late Breaking Papers: Interaction, Knowledge and Social Media [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 12427],  pp. 305 ff. DOI logo
Kashanizadeh, Zahra & Charles Forceville
2020. Visual and multimodal interaction of metaphor and metonymy. Cognitive Linguistic Studies 7:1  pp. 78 ff. DOI logo
Kashanizadeh, Zahra & Charles Forceville
Moya-Guijarro, Arsenio Jesús & Begoña Ruiz Cordero
Pérez-Sobrino, Paula & Jeannette Littlemore
2020. What makes an advert go viral?. In Performing metaphoric creativity across modes and contexts [Figurative Thought and Language, 7],  pp. 119 ff. DOI logo
Saito, Hayato & Wen-yu Chiang
2020. Political cartoons portraying the Musha Uprising in Taiwan under Japanese rule. Metaphor and the Social World 10:1  pp. 76 ff. DOI logo
Szelid, Veronika & Réka Benczes
2020. From verbality to visuality. Cognitive Linguistic Studies 7:1  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Szelid, Veronika & Réka Benczes
2022. From verbality to visuality. In Visual Metaphors [Benjamins Current Topics, 124],  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Zhang, Cun & Charles Forceville
Pérez-Sobrino, Paula, Jeannette Littlemore & David Houghton
2019. The Role of Figurative Complexity in the Comprehension and Appreciation of Advertisements. Applied Linguistics 40:6  pp. 957 ff. DOI logo
Stampoulidis, Georgios, Marianna Bolognesi & Jordan Zlatev
2019. A cognitive semiotic exploration of metaphors in Greek street art. Cognitive Semiotics 12:1 DOI logo
Winter, Bodo, Paula Pérez-Sobrino, Lucien Brown & Andriy Myachykov
2019. The sound of soft alcohol: Crossmodal associations between interjections and liquor. PLOS ONE 14:8  pp. e0220449 ff. DOI logo
Elyamany, Nashwa
2018. A Multimodal Analysis of the Representation of Hegemonic Masculinity and Hegemonic Femininity on “Men’s Health” and “Women’s Health” Cover Pages (January 2011 – June 2016). Anàlisi  pp. 51 ff. DOI logo
[no author supplied]
2019. Conclusion. In Sensory Linguistics [Converging Evidence in Language and Communication Research, 20],  pp. 235 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 30 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

Subjects and metadata

Communication Studies

Communication Studies

Main BIC Subject

Main BISAC Subject

ONIX Metadata

ONIX 2.1
ONIX 3.0

LoC, MARC XML

U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  2017045525 | Marc record
Mobile Menu Logo with link to supplementary files background Layer 1 prag Twitter_Logo_Blue