Advertising Language BOOK
Advertising Language BOOK
Advertising Language BOOK
Keiko Tanaka
Conclusion 55
4 PUNS 58
Introduction 58
Puns, ambiguity and Relevance Theory 59
Puns in advertising 61
‘Nonsense’ puns 64
Puns and context 70
Puns and sexual innuendo 73
Puns with two communicated meanings 77
Conclusion 81
5 METAPHORS 82
Introduction 82
Lakoff and Johnson’s approach to metaphor 83
Grice’s approach to metaphor 84
A Relevance-based approach to metaphor 87
Metaphors in advertising 88
Metaphors in perfume advertisements 93
Metaphors and puns 102
Conclusion 104
6 IMAGES OF WOMEN 106
Introduction 106
Word meaning and concepts 106
Intelligence 109
Individualism 116
Feminism in Japan 123
Conclusion 128
CONCLUSION 130
Bibliography 132
Index 142
PLATES
My special gratitude goes to Deirdre Wilson for all her support and
encouragement over the years and for her useful comments and
advice on earlier drafts of this book. Without her generous help,
this book could not have been written. If I remain unenlightened,
the fault is entirely mine.
Three other people gave me strong academic and moral support.
As my supervisor, Ruth Kempson steered to its completion the
Ph.D. thesis upon which this book is based, while Robyn Carston
gave me friendly support and provided me with useful comments
on earlier drafts. I owe a particular debt of gratitude to Samya
Bencherif, with whom I spent numerous stimulating hours
discussing Relevance Theory, as we jointly worked on covert
communication, she in the political sphere and I in advertising.
Since Samya’s return to Algeria, we have lost touch, perhaps due
to the tense political situation in that country. I hope that she
may find this book somewhere, and that it will stimulate her to
complete her thesis and take up her work in this area once again.
I count it a great privilege to have worked with these scholars,
but, again, the remaining faults in this book are entirely mine.
I also wish to express my gratitude to those who made it
possible for me to embark on writing a Ph.D. thesis at all. Jojiro
Kishida taught me English at Kobe City University of Foreign
Studies and encouraged me to come to Britain to study
linguistics. He shared with me his infectious excitement about
linguistics, and made it mine. Patrick Hanks supervised me at the
University of Essex for my M.A. He taught me the joy of studying
linguistics, and, indeed, the joy of studying in general. Had I not
met those people, this book would not even have been started. I
stand indebted to them.
My heartfelt gratitude goes to my family, and especially to my
late grandmother, Hatsue Akutagawa, who gave me financial
support to start a Ph.D., and to my two mentors, my mother,
Kazuko Tanaka, and my late aunt, Takako Takizawa, for their
xi
INTRODUCTION
There has long been interest in the means employed by
advertisers to communicate with their audience. This chapter
assesses how the problems raised by the language of advertising
have been approached. It is my contention that those who have
written on this subject have not dealt adequately with the
question of the context within which an audience processes an
advertisement. Conversely, they have relied too much on ‘system
of signs’ in the text. This chapter reviews a selection of theories in
semiotics and linguistics which provides insights into the
problem. At the same time, the defects of these theories are
examined from the point of view of the contribution made by
Relevance Theory (Sperber and Wilson 1986a, 1995).