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Lea Povozhaev

Addiction Rhetoric: Conceptual Metaphors in Illness Narratives


2014. 204 S. 220 mm
Verlag/Jahr: SCHOLARīS PRESS 2014
ISBN: 3-639-66394-2 (3639663942)
Neue ISBN: 978-3-639-66394-5 (9783639663945)

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The following study investigates a basic premise that the manner in which a doctor responds to a patientīs emotions and thoughts affects the way a patient feels about telling more of his/her illness experience. This book investigates how a doctor and his patients conceptualize addiction, use language to express his/her conceptualization, and respond to each other in the context of their conversational illness narrative. Using George Lakoff and Mark Johnsonīs Conceptual Metaphor Theory (CMT), I analyzed the conceptual metaphors within these conversations. I found that patientsī predominant structural metaphor is addiction is illness experience, and the doctorīs predominant structural metaphor is addiction is disease. Additionally, my study conceptualized each conversation as a single narrative through which addiction is socially constructed by the doctorīs and patientīs rhetorical patterns of response to the otherīs structural metaphor. The doctorīs and patientsī responses within their conversational illness narratives produces resistance and/or agreement. Their rhetorical position allows them to work towards wellness, to the degree that they are rhetorically compatible.
Lea Povozhaev has an MFA in Creative Writing and a PhD in Rhetoric and Composition from Kent State University, 2014. She researches medical rhetoric and writes creative nonfiction. Her memoir When Russia Came to Stay was published in 2012. Currently, her work with narrative healing manifests in her creative, spiritual, and academic writing.