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This book adds the missing link between post-foundational discourse
theory and the methods of empirical research, and in doing so it
develops a post-foundational discourse analysis research program.
The book offers a structure of the research program, and explores
the methodologization of other discourse analytical approaches.
This edited volume brings together leading international
researchers from across the social sciences to examine the
theoretical premises, methodological options and critical
potentials of the Essex School of discourse analysis, founded on
the work of Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe. In doing so, it
presents a clear picture of a poststructuralist and
post-foundational research program to postdisciplinary discourse
research. Divided into three parts, it begins by elaborating the
ontological, theoretical and methodological foundations of the
Essex School's approach to discourse analysis. The second part
provides empirical case studies showing how the Essex School
research program informs and instructs empirical discourse
research. In the concluding third part authors explain how and with
what possible consequences this strand of discourse research
contributes to social practices of critique. It offers a crucial
contribution to the further methodologization and
operationalization of the Essex School's approach so as to make it
a viable alternative to discourse-analytical approaches that take
dominant positions in today's 'field of discourse studies'. The
book's transdisciplinary focus will attract readers who use
discourse analysis in all areas of the social sciences and
humanities, particularly applied linguistics, cultural
anthropology, sociology, philosophy and history.
This book provides an empirical study of the increasing importance
of the concept of the entrepreneur in the context of the neoliberal
cultural paradigm. Using the theoretical framework of the
post-structural discourse theory and methods of qualitative
discourse analysis, the book describes the changes in political
discourse that resulted in the increasing dominance of the figure
of the entrepreneur after the late 1980s.
This book provides an empirical study of the increasing importance
of the concept of the entrepreneur in the context of the neoliberal
cultural paradigm. Using the theoretical framework of the
post-structural discourse theory and methods of qualitative
discourse analysis, the book describes the changes in political
discourse that resulted in the increasing dominance of the figure
of the entrepreneur after the late 1980s.
This edited volume brings together leading international
researchers from across the social sciences to examine the
theoretical premises, methodological options and critical
potentials of the Essex School of discourse analysis, founded on
the work of Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe. In doing so, it
presents a clear picture of a poststructuralist and
post-foundational research program to postdisciplinary discourse
research. Divided into three parts, it begins by elaborating the
ontological, theoretical and methodological foundations of the
Essex School's approach to discourse analysis. The second part
provides empirical case studies showing how the Essex School
research program informs and instructs empirical discourse
research. In the concluding third part authors explain how and with
what possible consequences this strand of discourse research
contributes to social practices of critique. It offers a crucial
contribution to the further methodologization and
operationalization of the Essex School's approach so as to make it
a viable alternative to discourse-analytical approaches that take
dominant positions in today's 'field of discourse studies'. The
book's transdisciplinary focus will attract readers who use
discourse analysis in all areas of the social sciences and
humanities, particularly applied linguistics, cultural
anthropology, sociology, philosophy and history.
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