ACL2025
When People are Floods: Analyzing Dehumanizing Metaphors in Immigration Discourse with Large Language Models
Julia Mendelsohn, Ceren Budak
5 citations
Abstract
Metaphor, discussing one concept in terms of another, is abundant in politics and can shape how people understand important issues. We develop a computational approach to measure metaphorical language, focusing on immigration discourse on social media. Grounded in qualitative social science research, we identify seven source domain concepts evoked in immigration discourse (e.g. WATER or VERMIN). We propose and evaluate a novel technique that leverages both word-level and document-level signals to measure metaphor with respect to these source domains. We then study the relationship between metaphor, political ideology, and user engagement in 400K US tweets about immigration. While conservatives tend to use dehumanizing metaphors more than liberals, this effect varies widely across source domains. Moreover, creature-related metaphor is associated with more retweets, especially for liberal authors. Our work highlights the potential for computational methods to complement qualitative approaches in understanding subtle and implicit language in political discourse. 1