Metaphors we Lie by: our 'War' against COVID-19.

Margherita Benzi, Marco Novarese
Author Information
  1. Margherita Benzi: Department of Law, Economics and Social Sciences (DIGSPES), via Cavour 84, 15121, Alessandria, Italy. margherita.benzi@uniupo.it. ORCID
  2. Marco Novarese: Department of Law, Economics and Social Sciences (DIGSPES), via Cavour 84, 15121, Alessandria, Italy. ORCID

Abstract

In this paper we discuss the influence of war as a metaphor in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. After an introduction on the traditional analysis of the war metaphor, we address the social consequences of using this metaphor, a topic that has been widely debated with regard to public communication in the context of COVID-19. We pay particular attention to a theory that many intellectuals have raised: the possibility that the use of the metaphor in this context is harmful to a democratic society because it may lead citizens to accept limited civil liberties and authoritarian policies. After presenting the extensive literature on the use of the war metaphor before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, in the final section of the paper, we analyse experimental evidence of the effects of this metaphor. In the conclusion, we hint at open questions and suggest that the current evidence does not support claims of direct liberticidal influence.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. PRIN 2017S4PPM4/Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Università e della Ricerca

MeSH Term

COVID-19
Humans
Metaphor
Pandemics
Policy
SARS-CoV-2

Word Cloud

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