The genealogy of ‘gentrification’: Semantic prosody, metonymies, and metaphors of a class-struggle discourse in English

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Abstract

In this article I examine the concept of ‘gentrification’ from its inception to its current varied uses and interpretations. Using the Oxford English Dictionary’s third edition illustrative quotations database as a diachronic corpus of English, I employ a corpus-assisted and cognitive linguistics-inspired critical discourse analysis to trace the genealogy of the term within the broader field of related terms. By disentangling the emergence of this ideologically-laden term, the study enhances our understanding of how class-struggle discourse has evolved from the late Middle Ages to the Enlightenment and late-modernity. It is argued that a robust definition of ‘gentrification’ – which foregrounds the displacement of low-income residents – depends on historicizing the phenomenon, i.e. tracing its roots in concepts, practices and values.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)229-243
JournalLanguage & Communication
Volume99
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • gentrification/class-struggle-discourse
  • metonymy/metaphor
  • implicature
  • nominalization
  • semantic prosody
  • critical cognitive corpus-analysis

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