FRAMING HEALTH IN PRESIDENTIAL DISCOURSE: A COMPARATIVE COGNITIVE STUDY OF THE U.S. AND UZBEKISTAN DURING COVID-19

Authors

  • Kasimova Nafisa Farkhadovna Doctor in Philology, Associate Professor, Bukhara State University Author
  • Pulatova Mokhidil Bahodirovna Ist Year Master Student Bukhara State University Author

Keywords:

Cognitive analysis, political discourse, health conceptualization, COVID-19, conceptual metaphors, presidential discourse, cross-cultural linguistics.

Abstract

This article presents a comparative cognitive analysis of the concept of health in American and Uzbek presidential discourse during the COVID-19 pandemic. Based on speeches by Donald Trump, Joe Biden, and Shavkat Mirziyoyev, the study applies cognitive linguistics, conceptual metaphor theory, and discourse analysis. The findings show both similarities and cultural differences: American discourse frames health through war, individual responsibility, and national security, while Uzbek discourse emphasizes health as a collective social value and moral responsibility. The study highlights the role of cultural and cognitive models in shaping political representations of health.

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Published

2026-04-07

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

FRAMING HEALTH IN PRESIDENTIAL DISCOURSE: A COMPARATIVE COGNITIVE STUDY OF THE U.S. AND UZBEKISTAN DURING COVID-19. (2026). Educator Insights: Journal of Teaching Theory and Practice, 2(4), 58-62. https://brightmindpublishing.com/index.php/EI/article/view/2373