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Synthesising diverse research avenues for politics, discourse, and
political discourse, this cutting-edge Handbook examines the
formative traditions, current theoretical and methodological
landscape, and genres and domains over which political discourse
extends. Drawing on rich and dynamic models in critical cognitive
linguistics, pragmatics, metaphor analysis, context, and
multimodality studies, leading scholars provide tools to analyse a
broad range of traditional and modern genres of political
communication. Taking a historical dive into formative traditions
in political discourse, including rhetoric and social and
poststructuralist theories, this Handbook revises these classical
models of political communication against new empirical contexts,
to offer the most fruitful, objective and universal methodologies
to date. Examining propaganda, advertising, political speeches and
election campaigns, this Handbook pays particular attention to
newly arising genres and discourses which reflect the momentous
changes in the public domain, fuelled by recent and developing
events including the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war.
Drawing diverse insights from a wide array of disciplines, this
Handbook will prove invaluable to students and scholars of
political theory, sociology, philosophy, linguistics, discourse
analysis and communication studies who are looking for innovative
methodologies with which to analyse political discourse.
This book explores the linguistic patterns of conflict, crisis and
threat generation in Polish political rhetoric that have been at
the heart of state-level policies since the Law and Justice (PiS)
Party came to power in October 2015. Analysing a vast corpus of
speeches, statements and remarks by prominent Law and Justice Party
politicians, this book sheds light on internal parliamentary and
presidential discourse against opponents of the government, before
widening its lens to Poland's strained relations with the EU
regarding refugee distribution and immigration. Drawing on theories
from contemporary critical discourse studies and critical-cognitive
pragmatics, the book shows how the crisis, conflict and threat
elements in these discourses produce public coercion and strengthen
the Party's leadership. Piotr Cap extends his argument further to
examine discursive examples from Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria,
Austria, Italy and the UK, highlighting the correlation between the
Law and Justice Party and broader socio-political and rhetorical
trends in contemporary Europe. The result is an authoritative
panorama of the mutual dependencies and shared discursive
strategies of European right-wing groups.
This book investigates linguistic strategies of threat construction
and fear generation in contemporary public communication, including
state political discourse as well as non-governmental, media and
institutional discourses. It describes the ways in which the
construction of closeness and remoteness can be manipulated in the
public sphere and bound up with fear, security and conflict.
Featuring a series of case studies in different domains, from
presidential speeches to environmental discourse, it demonstrates
how political and organizational leaders enforce the imminence of
an outside threat to claim legitimization of preventive policies.
It reveals that the best legitimization effects are obtained by
discursively constructed fear appeals, which ensure quick social
mobilization. The scope of the book is of immediate concern in the
modern globalized era where borders and distance dissolve and are
re-imagined. It will appeal to students and researchers in
linguistics, discourse analysis, media communication as well as
social and political sciences.
CDS is a multifarious field constantly developing different
methodological frameworks for analysing dynamically evolving
aspects of language in a broad range of socio-political and
institutional contexts. This volume is a cutting edge,
interdisciplinary account of these theoretical and empirical
developments. It presents an up-to-date survey of Critical
Discourse Studies (CDS), covering both the theoretical landscape
and the analytical territories that it extends over. It is intended
for critical scholars and students who wish to keep abreast of the
current state of the art. The book is divided into two parts. In
the first part, the chapters are organised around different
methodological perspectives for CDS (history, cognition,
multimodality and corpora, among others). In the second part, the
chapters are organised around particular discourse types and topics
investigated in CDS, both traditionally (e.g. issues of racism and
gender inequality) and only more recently (e.g. issues of health,
public policy, and the environment). This is, altogether, an
essential new reference work for all CDS practitioners.
Approaches to Conflict: Theoretical, Interpersonal, and Discursive
Dynamics aims to investigate the role of communication and emotions
in conflict contexts. In addition to the fundamental importance of
communication in various aspects of conflict, this volume offers a
prominent position to the inherent part played by the effects of a
wide range of emotions. This multi-disciplinary project draws from
communication studies and media, public relations, philosophy,
psychology and neuroscience, linguistics, business studies,
political science, literature, and cultural studies.
The book presents an application of inductive and deductive
research modes in an analysis of political discourse. The
discussion is illustrated with text samples from inaugural
addresses of US presidents and various speeches given by prominent
NATO politicians. It is argued that both analytic approaches have
their inherent inadequacies, which poses a need for an integrated
research mode. Also, numerous observations are made about the
rhetoric of the analyzed text types.
This book investigates linguistic strategies of threat construction
and fear generation in contemporary public communication, including
state political discourse as well as non-governmental, media and
institutional discourses. It describes the ways in which the
construction of closeness and remoteness can be manipulated in the
public sphere and bound up with fear, security and conflict.
Featuring a series of case studies in different domains, from
presidential speeches to environmental discourse, it demonstrates
how political and organizational leaders enforce the imminence of
an outside threat to claim legitimization of preventive policies.
It reveals that the best legitimization effects are obtained by
discursively constructed fear appeals, which ensure quick social
mobilization. The scope of the book is of immediate concern in the
modern globalized era where borders and distance dissolve and are
re-imagined. It will appeal to students and researchers in
linguistics, discourse analysis, media communication as well as
social and political sciences.
This volume is dedicated to Professor Piotr Stalmaszczyk, Head of
the Department of English and General Linguistics at the University
of Lodz, on the occasion of his 60th birthday. It includes texts
written by his students, colleagues and friends, dealing with a
variety of urgent, widely discussed topics in the contemporary
language studies. Spanning contributions from language history,
philosophy, rhetoric and argumentation, methodology, and discourse
studies, it provides an authoritative outline of the field and a
timely response to the existing challenges, thus making for a
concise handbook of modern linguistics. It is recommended to
graduate students of philology, as well as researchers working in
linguistics and other disciplines within the broad spectrum of
humanities and social sciences.
Although the term implicitness is ubiquitous in the pragmatic
scholarship, it has rarely constituted the focus of attention per
se. This book aims to help crystallize the concept of implicitness
by defining its linguistic boundaries, as well as specifying and
exploring its different communicative manifestations. The
contributions by leading specialists scrutinize the main
conceptualizations, forms and occurrences of implicitness (such as
implicature, impliciture, explicature, entailment, presupposition,
etc.) at different levels of linguistic organization. The volume
focuses on phrasal, sentential, and discursive phenomena,
showcasing the richness and variety of implicit forms of
communication, systematizing (where possible) the existing analytic
perspectives, and identifying the most productive procedures for
further exploration. Taken together, the chapters exhibit
theoretical differences that hinder a consensus on the nature of
implicitness, but they simultaneously reveal methodological points
of contact and raise common questions, thereby signposting a future
analytic agenda. The book will appeal to both theoretically and
empirically minded scholars working within and across the
disciplines of Pragmatics, Semantics, Language Philosophy,
Discourse Analysis, and Communication Studies.
Critical discourse studies is a multifarious field constantly
developing different methodological frameworks for dynamically
analysing evolving aspects of language in a broad range of
socio-political and institutional contexts. This volume is a
cutting-edge, interdisciplinary account of these theoretical and
empirical developments. It presents an up-to-date survey of
critical discourse studies (CDS), covering both the theoretical
landscape and the analytical territories that it extends over. It
is intended for critical scholars and students who wish to keep
abreast of the current state of the art. The book is divided into
two parts. In the first part, the chapters are organised around
different methodological perspectives for CDS (history, cognition,
multimodality and corpora, among others). In the second part, the
chapters are organised around particular discourse types and topics
investigated in CDS, both traditionally (e.g. issues of racism and
gender inequality) and only more recently (e.g. issues of health,
public policy, and the environment). This is, altogether, an
essential new reference work for all CDS practitioners.
This book explores the linguistic patterns of conflict, crisis and
threat generation in Polish political rhetoric that have been at
the heart of state-level policies since the Law and Justice (PiS)
Party came to power in October 2015. Analysing a vast corpus of
speeches, statements and remarks by prominent Law and Justice Party
politicians, this book sheds light on internal parliamentary and
presidential discourse against opponents of the government, before
widening its lens to Poland's strained relations with the EU
regarding refugee distribution and immigration. Drawing on theories
from contemporary critical discourse studies and critical-cognitive
pragmatics, the book shows how the crisis, conflict and threat
elements in these discourses produce public coercion and strengthen
the Party's leadership. Piotr Cap extends his argument further to
examine discursive examples from Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria,
Austria, Italy and the UK, highlighting the correlation between the
Law and Justice Party and broader socio-political and rhetorical
trends in contemporary Europe. The result is an authoritative
panorama of the mutual dependencies and shared discursive
strategies of European right-wing groups.
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