Metaphor In Political Cartoons: The Case Of Ghana’s Free Senior High School (SHS) Policy
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University Of Ghana
Abstract
Every political party presents policies that appeal to the masses and believe to be
people-centred. The media further explain these policies through various means.
The media are very diplomatic in employing succinct, trouble-free, but
comprehensive means to present political news. Since metaphorical language is
known to provide such affordances, this study examined how the media
(journalists) use metaphor in political cartoons to present the message of the
introduction and implementation of Ghana’s Free Senior High School Policy.
Thirteen political cartoons related to Free SHS Policy were collected from August
2017 to November 2019 for analysis using Critical Metaphor Analysis as a
framework. The data were grouped under different sub-themes and analyzed
qualitatively. The data analysis revealed that the cartoonists (journalists) used
different conceptual source domains to present the Free SHS policy message
visually. These source domains included cooking, child delivery, seriously sick
person, agriculture, sports, feeding children, pasturing cattle, religious confession,
and climbing a ladder to enter a container. The findings suggest that the use of
these source domains could promote a better understanding of the policy among
the Ghanaian people. The analysis again showed the Ghanaian linguistic
landscape as very diverse (multilingualism) is a reality in the Ghanaian linguistic
society (as demonstrated in the cartoons' bubble speeches).
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MPhil. English