Guest Editor:
Prof. Dr. L. David Ritchie
Professor, Department of
Communication, Portland State
University, Portland, OR 97207,
USA
cgrd@pdx.edu
Deadline for manuscript
submissions:
1 March 2024
Message from the Guest Editor
Dear Colleagues,
Discussions of metaphors o��en imply that they have fixed,
code-like meanings. However, there is ample evidence that
metaphors are o��en ambiguous and susceptible to a
variety of interpretations.
Contributions to this Special Issue are welcome from any
perspective. When they encounter an ambiguous
metaphor, do interlocutors access different conceptual
metaphors? Do they activate different perceptual
simulations? Do they generate or activate different
comparisons or different categories? How do speakers or
writers use "tuning devices" to guide or influence
disambiguation? How do contextual factors influence
audiences' identification of a metaphor as deliberate or
not deliberate, and if people differ in how they identify a
metaphor as deliberate or not, how does this affect their
communicative interactions?
Acceptable topics might address any aspect of metaphor
theory, including metaphor identification and
interpretation, effects on communicative interactions, and
methodological issues related to metaphor research.
Prof. Dr. L. David Ritchie
Guest Editor
an Open Access Journal by MDPI
For details see the PDF file attached, or visit the special issue website:
https://www.mdpi.com/journal/languages/special_issues/IKIIVR9Y2C