Article published In: Metaphor and metonymy revisited beyond the Contemporary Theory of Metaphor: Recent developments and applications
Edited by Francisco Gonzálvez-García, María Sandra Peña-Cervel and Lorena Pérez-Hernández
[Review of Cognitive Linguistics 9:1] 2011
► pp. 130–152
The adaptation of metaphors across genres
Published online: 6 July 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.9.1.07sem
https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.9.1.07sem
In this paper I consider the ways in which a metaphor that was first introduced in an article on pain mechanisms published in Science has been adapted and developed in a selection of texts that can be broadly described as ‘educational’: a neuroscience website aimed at children, a self-help guide for chronic pain sufferers, and a book aimed at medical professionals. In the course of the discussion I point out both the advantages and potential disadvantages of these developments. As such, this paper aims to make a contribution to a growing body of research on metaphor in actual contexts of use, and particularly on variation in the use of metaphor across genres that are aimed at different audiences.
Cited by (15)
Cited by 15 other publications
Alvi, Amatulhafeez & Safia AbdulRahim Alvi
Krawczak, Karolina
Bevitori, Cinzia & Katherine E. Russo
Augé, Anaïs
2022. Ideological and explanatory uses of the COVID-19 as a war metaphor in science. Review of Cognitive Linguistics 20:2 ► pp. 412 ff.
Beger, Anke & Thomas H. Smith
2020. Introduction. In How Metaphors Guide, Teach and Popularize Science [Figurative Thought and Language, 6], ► pp. 1 ff.
Disney, Stephen J.
Williams Camus, Julia T.
2020.
To be or not to be: Reconsidering the metaphors of apoptosis in press popularisation articles. In How Metaphors Guide, Teach and Popularize Science [Figurative Thought and Language, 6], ► pp. 141 ff.
Dienstbach, Dalby
Incelli, Ersilia
Hainline, Brian, Wayne Derman, Alan Vernec, Richard Budgett, Masataka Deie, Jiří Dvořák, Chris Harle, Stanley A Herring, Mike McNamee, Willem Meeuwisse, G Lorimer Moseley, Bade Omololu, John Orchard, Andrew Pipe, Babette M Pluim, Johan Ræder, Christian Siebert, Mike Stewart, Mark Stuart, Judith A Turner, Mark Ware, David Zideman & Lars Engebretsen
Stewart, Mike
Šeškauskienė, Inesa & Oksana Valentjeva
Semino, Elena, Alice Deignan & Jeannette Littlemore
McIntyre, Dan
[no author supplied]
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 30 november 2025. 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.
