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Freedom of speech is a tradition distinctive to American political
culture, and this book focuses on the major debates and discourses
that shaped this tradition. Today the American Bill of Rights, with
its famous First Amendment, is generally taken for granted, but
when James Madison proposed a Bill of Rights in 1789, the reaction
among his colleagues in the first Congress was hostile. The book
examines how Madison was able to prevail in spite of such
opposition. It focuses on discourses connected to the Sedition Act
of 1798, which represented a serious threat to freedom of speech
and the first Amendment. The author sheds fresh light on key
Congressional debates on the Bill of Rights and the Sedition Act by
developing and applying an approach to fallacy theory that is
suitable to the study of political discourse. He further focuses on
criticism of the Madison administration in Federalist newspapers
during the War of 1812, arguing that Madison's toleration of such
criticism was important in shaping a tradition of free expression
in the United States. Efforts to suppress free expression during
the Wilson administration represented a serious challenge to this
tradition, and the author goes on to employ fallacy theory in
examining Congressional discourses for and against Wilson's policy
of repression.
"Arguing that a corpus-based approach is indispensable for the
study of changes of complementation in British and American
English, the author examines several central patterns of sentential
complementation in a number of electronic corpora to shed light on
the emergence and spread of innovative constructions in relatively
recent English"--
This book presents the latest work in the field of complementation
studies. Leading scholars and upcoming researchers in the area
approach complementation from various perspectives and different
frameworks, such as Cognitive Grammar and construction grammars, to
offer a broad survey of the field and provide thought-provoking
reading.
This book documents changes and trends in English predicate
complementation. In-depth case studies of grammatical patterns
presented here uncover new links between form and meaning in these
constructions, offering fresh insights into explanatory principles
to account for variation and change in the system of English
predicate complementation.
This book presents the latest work in the field of complementation
studies. Leading scholars and upcoming researchers in the area
approach complementation from various perspectives and different
frameworks, such as Cognitive Grammar and construction grammars, to
offer a broad survey of the field and provide thought-provoking
reading.
Freedom of speech is a tradition distinctive to American political
culture, and this book focuses on major debates and discourses that
shaped this tradition. It sheds fresh light on key Congressional
debates in the early American Republic, developing and applying an
approach to fallacy theory suitable to the study of political
discourse.
The book shows how the system of English predicate complementation
has been undergoing an amazing amount of variation and change in
recent centuries, and identifies explanatory principles to account
for this change and variation, with evidence from large electronic
corpora of both British and American English.
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