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In this book, Monika Bednarek addresses the need for a systemic
analysis of television discourse and characterization within
linguistics and media studies. She presents both corpus stylistics
and manual analysis of linguistic and multimodal features of
fictional television. The first part focuses on communicative
context, multimodality, genre, audience and scripted television
dialogue while the second part focuses on televisual
characterization, introducing and illustrating the novel concept of
expressive character identity. Aside from the study of television
dialogue, which informs it throughout, this book is a contribution
to studying characterization, to narrative analysis and to corpus
stylistics. With its combination of quantitative and qualitative
analysis, the book represents a wealth of exploratory, innovative
and challenging perspectives, and is a key contribution to the
analysis of television dialogue and character identity. The volume
will be of interest to researchers and students in linguistics,
stylistics and media/television studies, as well as to corpus
linguists and communication theorists. The book will be a useful
resource for lecturers teaching at both undergraduate and
postgraduate levels in media discourse and related areas.
The Discourse of News Values breaks new ground in multimodal news
discourse, offering the first book-length treatment of the
discursive analysis of news values and the construction of
newsworthiness. The book explores how the news is "sold" (made
newsworthy) to audiences through the semiotic resources of language
and image, providing a new analytical framework which can be used
by other researchers in their own subsequent studies. It combines
in-depth theoretical discussion with analyses of authentic news
discourse (both language and images) from around the
English-speaking world, including three empirical case studies: one
that analyzes news values around the topic of cycling across
different English-speaking cultures; one that analyzes images
disseminated by news media organizations via Facebook; and a third
that focuses on the 100 "most shared" news items.
As entertaining as it is enlightening, Creating Dialogue for TV:
Screenwriters Talk Television presents interviews with five
Hollywood professionals who talk about all things related to
dialogue - from naturalistic style to the building of characters to
swearing and dialect. Screenwriters/showrunners David Mandel (Curb
Your Enthusiasm, Veep), Jane Espenson (Buffy, Battlestar Galactica,
Once Upon a Time), Robert Berens (Supernatural), Sheila Lawrence
(Gilmore Girls, Ugly Betty, The Marvelous Mrs Maisel), and Doris
Egan (Tru Calling, House, Reign) field a linguist's inquiries about
the craft of writing dialogue. This book is for anyone who has ever
wondered what creative processes and attitudes lie behind the words
they encounter when tuning into their favourite television show. It
provides direct insights into Hollywood writers' knowledge and
opinions of how language is used in television narratives, and in
doing so shows how language awareness, attitudes and the craft of
using words are utilised to create popular TV series. The book will
appeal to students and teachers in screenwriting, creative writing
and linguistics as well as lay readers.
Evaluation is the linguistic expression of speaker/writer opinion,
and has only recently become the focus of linguistic analysis. This
book presents the first corpus-based account of evaluation; one
hundred newspaper articles collated to form a 70,000 word
comparable corpus, drawn from both tabloid and broadsheet media.
The book provides detailed explanations and justifications of the
underlying framework of evaluation, as well as demonstrating how
this is part of the larger framework of media discourse. Unlike
many other linguistic analyses of media language, it makes frequent
reference to the production circumstances of newspaper discourse,
in particular the so-called 'news values' that shape the creation
of the news. Cutting-edge and insightful, Evaluation in Media
Discourse will be of interest to academics and researchers in
corpus linguistics and media discourse.
Corpus-based discourse analysts are becoming increasingly
interested in the incorporation of non-linguistic data, for example
through corpus-assisted multimodal discourse analysis. This Element
applies this new approach in relation to how news values are
discursively constructed through language and photographs. Using
case studies of news from China and Australia, the Element presents
a cross-linguistic comparison of news values in national day
reporting. Discursive news values analysis (DNVA) has so far been
mainly applied to English-language data. This Element offers a new
investigation of Chinese DNVA and provides momentum to scholars
around the world who are already adopting DNVA to their local
contexts. With its focus on national days across two very different
cultures, the Element also contributes to research on national
identity and cross-linguistic corpus linguistics.
This book explores the role of language and images in newspaper,
radio, online and television news. The authors introduce useful
frameworks for analysing language, image and the interaction
between the two, and illustrate these with authentic news stories
from around the English-speaking world, ranging from the
Oktoberfest to environmental disasters to the killing of Osama bin
Laden. This analysis persuasively illustrates how events are
re-told in the news and made 'newsworthy' through both language and
image. This clearly written and accessible introduction to news
discourse is essential reading for students, lecturers, and
researchers in Linguistics, Media/Journalism Studies, and
Semiotics.
This book offers a comprehensive linguistic analysis of
contemporary US television series. Adopting an interdisciplinary
and multimethodological approach, Monika Bednarek brings together
linguistic analysis of the Sydney Corpus of Television Dialogue
with analysis of scriptwriting manuals, interviews with Hollywood
scriptwriters, and a survey undertaken with university students
about their consumption of TV series. In so doing, she presents
five new and original empirical studies. The focus on language use
in a professional context (the television industry), on
scriptwriting pedagogy, and on learning and teaching provides an
applied linguistic lens on TV series. This is complemented by
perspectives taken from media linguistics, corpus linguistics and
sociocultural linguistics/sociolinguistics. Throughout the book,
multiple dialogue extracts are presented from a wide variety of
well-known fictional television series, including The Big Bang
Theory, Grey's Anatomy and Bones. Researchers in applied
linguistics, discourse analysis, critical discourse analysis,
corpus linguistics, sociolinguistics and media linguistics will
find the book both stimulating and unique in its approach.
Martin and Bednarek address the need for innovative analyses of
multi-modal discourse, identity and affiliation within functional
linguistics. "New Discourse on Language" addresses the need for
innovative analyses of multi-modal discourse, identity and
affiliation within functional linguistics. The chapters in this
volume are connected by their common underlying theoretical
approach, Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL), and by their focus
on semantic variation (across modalities of communication and
between speakers) as well as the negotiation of identity and
affiliation. The analyses focus on a diverse range of texts from
very different contexts, using analytic techniques that are based
on the latest research in this field. They represent a wealth of
exploratory, innovative and challenging perspectives, and are a key
contribution to the extension of systemic-functional theory to the
analysis of multimodality, identity and affiliation. The volume is
of interest to linguists, applied linguists, semioticians, and
communication theorists.
As entertaining as it is enlightening, Creating Dialogue for TV:
Screenwriters Talk Television presents interviews with five
Hollywood professionals who talk about all things related to
dialogue - from naturalistic style to the building of characters to
swearing and dialect. Screenwriters/showrunners David Mandel (Curb
Your Enthusiasm, Veep), Jane Espenson (Buffy, Battlestar Galactica,
Once Upon a Time), Robert Berens (Supernatural), Sheila Lawrence
(Gilmore Girls, Ugly Betty, The Marvelous Mrs Maisel), and Doris
Egan (Tru Calling, House, Reign) field a linguist's inquiries about
the craft of writing dialogue. This book is for anyone who has ever
wondered what creative processes and attitudes lie behind the words
they encounter when tuning into their favourite television show. It
provides direct insights into Hollywood writers' knowledge and
opinions of how language is used in television narratives, and in
doing so shows how language awareness, attitudes and the craft of
using words are utilised to create popular TV series. The book will
appeal to students and teachers in screenwriting, creative writing
and linguistics as well as lay readers.
Now reissued and retypeset, this canonical book explores the role
of language and images in newspaper, radio, online and television
news. The authors introduce useful frameworks for analysing
language, image and the interaction between the two, and illustrate
these with authentic news stories from around the English-speaking
world, ranging from the Oktoberfest to environmental disasters to
the killing of Osama bin Laden. This analysis persuasively
illustrates how events are retold in the news and made 'newsworthy'
through both language and image. This clearly written and
accessible introduction to news discourse is essential reading for
students, lecturers and researchers in linguistics, media and
journalism studies and semiotics.
This book offers a comprehensive linguistic analysis of
contemporary US television series. Adopting an interdisciplinary
and multimethodological approach, Monika Bednarek brings together
linguistic analysis of the Sydney Corpus of Television Dialogue
with analysis of scriptwriting manuals, interviews with Hollywood
scriptwriters, and a survey undertaken with university students
about their consumption of TV series. In so doing, she presents
five new and original empirical studies. The focus on language use
in a professional context (the television industry), on
scriptwriting pedagogy, and on learning and teaching provides an
applied linguistic lens on TV series. This is complemented by
perspectives taken from media linguistics, corpus linguistics and
sociocultural linguistics/sociolinguistics. Throughout the book,
multiple dialogue extracts are presented from a wide variety of
well-known fictional television series, including The Big Bang
Theory, Grey's Anatomy and Bones. Researchers in applied
linguistics, discourse analysis, critical discourse analysis,
corpus linguistics, sociolinguistics and media linguistics will
find the book both stimulating and unique in its approach.
The Discourse of News Values breaks new ground in multimodal news
discourse, offering the first book-length treatment of the
discursive analysis of news values and the construction of
newsworthiness. The book explores how the news is "sold" (made
newsworthy) to audiences through the semiotic resources of language
and image, providing a new analytical framework which can be used
by other researchers in their own subsequent studies. It combines
in-depth theoretical discussion with analyses of authentic news
discourse (both language and images) from around the
English-speaking world, including three empirical case studies: one
that analyzes news values around the topic of cycling across
different English-speaking cultures; one that analyzes images
disseminated by news media organizations via Facebook; and a third
that focuses on the 100 "most shared" news items.
This book explores the role of language and images in newspaper,
radio, online and television news. The authors introduce useful
frameworks for analysing language, image and the interaction
between the two, and illustrate these with authentic news stories
from around the English-speaking world, ranging from the
Oktoberfest to environmental disasters to the killing of Osama bin
Laden. This analysis persuasively illustrates how events are
re-told in the news and made 'newsworthy' through both language and
image. This clearly written and accessible introduction to news
discourse is essential reading for students, lecturers, and
researchers in Linguistics, Media/Journalism Studies, and
Semiotics.
A cutting-edge, new in paperback title which presents the first
corpus-based account of evaluation. Evaluation is the linguistic
expression of speaker/writer opinion, and has only recently become
the focus of linguistic analysis. This book presents the first
corpus-based account of evaluation: one hundred newspaper articles
collated to form a 70,000 word comparable corpus, drawn from both
tabloid and broadsheet media. The book provides detailed
explanations and justifications of the underlying framework of
evaluation, as well as demonstrating how this is part of the larger
framework of media discourse. Unlike many other linguistic analyses
of media language, it makes frequent reference to the production
circumstances of newspaper discourse, in particular the so-called
'news values' that shape the creation of the news.Cutting-edge and
insightful, "Evaluation in Media Discourse" will be of interest to
academics and researchers in corpus linguistics and media
discourse.The Editorial Board includes: Paul Baker (Lancaster),
Frantisek Cermak (Prague), Susan Conrad (Portland), Geoffrey Leech
(Lancaster), Dominique Maingueneau (Paris XII), Christian Mair
(Freiburg), Alan Partington (Bologna), Elena Tognini-Bonelli (Lecce
and TWC), Ruth Wodak (Lancaster and Vienna), and Feng Zhiwei
(Beijing). Corpus linguistics provides the methodology to extract
meaning from texts. Taking as its starting point the fact that
language is not a mirror of reality but lets us share what we know,
believe and think about reality, it focuses on language as a social
phenomenon, and makes visible the attitudes and beliefs expressed
by the members of a discourse community. Consisting of both spoken
and written language, discourse always has historical, social,
functional, and regional dimensions. Discourse can be monolingual
or multilingual, interconnected by translations. Discourse is where
language and social studies meet.
New Discourse on Language addresses the need for innovative
analyses of multi-modal discourse, identity and affiliation within
functional linguistics. The chapters in this volume are connected
by their common underlying theoretical approach, Systemic
Functional Linguistics (SFL), and by their focus on semantic
variation (across modalities of communication and between speakers)
as well as the negotiation of identity and affiliation. The
analyses focus on a diverse range of texts from very different
contexts, using analytic techniques that are based on the latest
research in this field. They represent a wealth of exploratory,
innovative and challenging perspectives, and are a key contribution
to the extension of systemic-functional theory to the analysis of
multimodality, identity and affiliation. The volume is of interest
to linguists, applied linguists, semioticians, and communication
theorists.
In this book, Monika Bednarek addresses the need for a systematic
analysis of television discourse and characterization within
linguistics and media studies.She presents both corpus stylistics
and manual analysis of linguistic and multimodal features of
fictional television. The first part focuses on communicative
context, multimodality, genre, audience and scripted television
dialogue while the second part focuses on televisual
characterization, introducing and illustrating the novel concept of
expressive character identity. Aside from the study of television
dialogue, which informs it throughout, this book is a contribution
to studying characterization, to narrative analysis and to corpus
stylistics.With its combination of quantitative and qualitative
analysis, the book represents a wealth of exploratory, innovative
and challenging perspectives, and is a key contribution to the
analysis of television dialogue and character identity.The volume
will be of interest to researchers and students in linguistics,
stylistics and media/television studies, as well as to corpus
linguists and communication theorists. The book will be a useful
resource for lecturers teaching at both undergraduate and
postgraduate levels in media discourse and related areas.
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