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Terrorism to me...it’s a sneaky way... it’s not like war. A discourse-dynamic metaphor analysis of concepts of group identity and empathy in a discussion.

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Presentation on theme: "Terrorism to me...it’s a sneaky way... it’s not like war. A discourse-dynamic metaphor analysis of concepts of group identity and empathy in a discussion."— Presentation transcript:

1 Terrorism to me...it’s a sneaky way... it’s not like war. A discourse-dynamic metaphor analysis of concepts of group identity and empathy in a discussion about terrorism. Lynne Cameron and Robert Maslen The Open University

2 Developing methods across funded research projects Project 1: Perception and Communication of the Risk of Terrorism (ESRC) Project 2: Living with Uncertainty (ESRC/AHRC)

3 Outline Project 1 data and methods Using project 1 as a starting point for project 2 Project 2 methods Findings Further work

4 Project 1 24 month project with researchers from several disciplines, blended methods and several stages. Funded by UK Economic and Social Research Council “New Security Challenges Programme” How do people conceptualise, interpret and assess background terrorist risk? Research Question: How do people conceptualise, interpret and assess background terrorist risk? Is there variation between groups, differentiated by socio-economic status, gender, place of residence, religious affiliation? What do they have in common?

5 Project 1 data 12 focus groups with members of the public Total participants: 96 Socio-economic status: AB = professional, skilled jobs C1/C2 = manual, semi- or unskilled jobs AB Men AB Women C1/C2 Men C1/C2 Women Muslim Men Muslim Women Total Leeds 88888848 London 88888848

6 Metaphor Analysis Transcription of audio recording to intonation units (Chafe, 1994; du Bois et al, 1993). Identification of linguistic metaphor vehicles (Cameron, 2003).. if they were living in some sort of stability, I would say it’s a flaw in the system 12,905 linguistic metaphors. Finding systematicity: constructing groups of connected metaphors

7 Identifying systematic metaphors BALANCE IS THE NORM FOR SOCIETY TERRORISM DISTURBS THE BALANCE.. if they were living in some sort of stability, (Leeds CD Men) because normal Muslims aren't like this (Leeds CD Women) the world is out of balance (London AB Women) it settles down (London Muslim Women) they try to disrupt the government (London Muslim Women) upsets the fragile peace (Leeds Muslim Men)

8 Identifying systematic metaphors THE RISK OF TERRORISM IS A GAME OF CHANCE PEOPLE HAVE NO CONTROL OVER OUTCOMES we get caught up in a poker game (London AB Men) they will play the bluff (London AB Men) the odds are very high (Leeds Muslim Women) if your number’s up (London AB Men) pawns in a game (Leeds CD Men)

9 Metaphor analysis: methodological challenges Working with large amounts of data Trustworthiness Training Reliability checking Tension between interpretation and rigour The nature of metaphor boundaries

10 Men make more use than Women of gaming metaphors to talk about the risks of terrorism. *** Muslim Men make much less use than non- Muslim Men. *** Muslim Women make little or no use of these. ** THE RISK OF TERRORISM IS A GAME OF CHANCE PEOPLE HAVE NO CONTROL OVER OUTCOMES

11 BALANCE IS THE NORM FOR INDIVIDUAL / SOCIETY Women make more use of BALANCE metaphors, speaking of norms for individuals and social groups as a balance, norm or equilibrium. ***

12 Project 2 Living with Uncertainty: Metaphor and the dynamics of empathy in discourse Opening up possibilities for alternative responses to uncertainty Research Fellowship with linked project activities Phase 1: Perceptions of other people in times of threat: Empathy and metaphor in focus group discussions

13 Research Question How do focus groups use metaphor and other language strategies to construct, negotiate and resist empathy in respect of other social groups?

14 Empathy Emotional empathy Perspective taking Moral/ethical positioning

15 Project 2 data Project 1 focus group data Already coded and analysed for metaphor

16 Terry if they were that brave,.. surely they'd say <Q right,.. this is our team,.. that's your team, … crack on Q> [] xxXX Terry but they don't,.. because they hide in the woodwork. xxmm. Finnwell who's to -- who's -- who's the teams?.. who's to say, which is the -- which is on -- who's on which team?

17 Building on the metaphor analysis Adding deictic metaphors (here/there, this/that) it’s not that these groups were not there, they were there all the time, they were there here in -- in England also.

18 Building on the metaphor analysis SOCIAL LANDSCAPE metaphors Across previous vehicle groupings Landscape related Topics: social life, social groups terrorism to me it’s a sneaky way (the government is) moving away from the situation,

19 SOCIAL LANDSCAPE SOCIO-CULTURAL DIFFERENCE IS PHYSICAL SEPARATION …divide the society, I mean it'll divide -- invisible walls now]],..being..built.

20 SOCIAL LANDSCAPE MODEL

21 Other language strategies related to empathy across social groups Explicit expression of empathy Perspective taking Narratives Scenarios Labelling Reference shifting

22 SCENARIO my children suddenly have realised, that,..not only they are British,..they are British Muslims... that is..what has happened. that suddenly they have realised,...until now, they were living, … (2.0) as if they were any other British youngster...but now they particularly feel it...so that,..age of innocence, has suddenly.. disappeared.

23 CODA my children suddenly have realised, that,..not only they are British,..they are British Muslims... that is..what has happened. that suddenly they have realised,...until now, they were living, … (2.0) as if they were any other British youngster...but now they particularly feel it...so that,..age of innocence, has suddenly.. disappeared.

24 LABELLING my children suddenly have realised, that,..not only they are British,..they are British Muslims... that is..what has happened. that suddenly they have realised,...until now, they were living, … (2.0) as if they were any other British youngster...but now they particularly feel it...so that,..age of innocence, has suddenly.. disappeared.

25 METAPHORS my children suddenly have realised, that,..not only they are British,..they are British Muslims... that is..what has happened. that suddenly they have realised,...until now, they were living, … (2.0) as if they were any other British youngster...but now they particularly feel it...so that,.. age of innocence, has suddenly.. disappeared.

26 METAPHORS-SOCIAL LANDSCAPE my children suddenly have realised, that,..not only they are British,..they are British Muslims... that is..what has happened. s-l that suddenly they have realised,...until now, they were living, … (2.0) as if they were any other British youngster...but now they particularly feel it...so that,.. age of innocence, has suddenly.. disappeared. s-l

27 PERSPECTIVE TAKING my children suddenly have realised, that,..not only they are British,..they are British Muslims... that is..what has happened. that suddenly they have realised,...until now, they were living, … (2.0) as if they were any other British youngster...but now they particularly feel it...so that,..age of innocence, has suddenly.. disappeared.

28 EMPATHY my children suddenly have realised, that,..not only they are British,..they are British Muslims... that is..what has happened. that suddenly they have realised,...until now, they were living, … (2.0) as if they were any other British youngster...but now they particularly feel it...so that,..age of innocence, has suddenly.. disappeared.

29 my children suddenly have realised, that,..not only they are British,..they are British Muslims... that is..what has happened. that suddenly they have realised,...until now, they were living, … (2.0) as if they were any other British youngster...but now they particularly feel it...so that,..age of innocence, has suddenly.. disappeared.

30 my children suddenly have realised, that,..not only they are British,..they are British Muslims... that is..what has happened. s-l that suddenly they have realised,...until now, they were living, … (2.0) as if they were any other British youngster...but now they particularly feel it...so that,.. age of innocence, has suddenly.. disappeared. s-l

31 Closing remarks Methods promising route to answering research question Further work Apply to remaining 11 groups Compare findings Connect empirical findings to theoretical model of empathy

32 Thank you http://www.open.ac.uk/researchprojects/livingwithuncertainty Cameron, L. (2003) Metaphor in educational discourse. London: Continuum. Chafe, W. (1994) Discourse, Consciousness and Time. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Du Bois, John W., Stephan Schuetze-Coburn, Susanna Cumming, & Danae Paolino (1993). Outline of discourse transcription. In Jane A. Edwards & Martin D. Lampert, eds., Talking data: Transcription and coding in discourse research. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. 45-89. Gadamer, H. (1982) Truth and Method. New York: Crossroad. Gallese V. (2003) The roots of empathy: The shared manifold hypothesis and the neural basis of intersubjectivity. Psychopatology, Vol. 36, No. 4, 171-180, 2003. Gallese V. (2005) Embodied simulation: from neurons to phenomenal experience. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, 4:23–48. Halpern, J. (2007) Empathy and patient physician conflicts. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 22/5, 696-700. Halpern, J. and Weinstein, H. (2004) Rehumanising the other: empathy and reconciliation. Human Rights Quarterly, 26, 561-583. Harrison, M. (2008). The paradox of fiction and the ethics of empathy: Reconceiving dickens's realism. Narrative 16(3), 256-278. Iacoboni, M. (2005) Neural mechanisms of imitation, Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 15:632-637 (2005). Vorauer, J. D., & Sasaki, S. J. (2009). Helpful only in the abstract? Ironic effects of empathy in intergroup interaction. Psychological Science, 20, 191-197. Wynn, R. and Wynn, M. (2006) Empathy as an interactionally achieved phenomenon in psychotherapy: Characteristics of some conversational resources. Journal of Pragmatics, 38, 1385-1397.


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