What is it about?
I have applied the blending theory (Fauconnier and Turner, 1998/2001) to the analysis of proper names in political discourse. I have described metonymic uses of the anthroponym ‘Assad’, the acronyms ‘ISIL’, ‘ISIS’, ‘Daesh’ and the toponymic adjective ‘European’. The following blends have been identified: ‘Assad’ - 'man/regime' and 'man/regime/deadly harm'; ‘ISIS’/‘ISIL’ - 'organisation/territory expansion/terrorism/deadly harm', 'organisation/state/territory' and 'organisation/occupation'; 'ISIL' /‘Daesh’ - 'organisation/on-line/extremism (terrorism)'; 'European’ - 'continent/union/democracy' and 'continent/good'.
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Why is it important?
Two important findings are that: 1) the construction of a metonymic blend in proper names often requires activation of world knowledge which forms part of the conceptual structure of the source or target domains of a proper name, and 2) in the language of politics proper names used as blends can carry an ideological or an axiological message, i.e. their referents can be contextually identified with a certain system of ideas, principles or values.
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This page is a summary of: The proper names ‘Assad’, ‘ISIL’, ‘ISIS’, ‘Daesh’ and ‘European’ as metonymic blends in political
discourse, Review of Cognitive Linguistics, January 2023, John Benjamins,
DOI: 10.1075/rcl.00129.gol.
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