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Review of Augé (2023): Metaphor and Argumentation in Climate Crisis Discourse Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-07 Jie Zou, Xiyun Zhong
This article reviews Metaphor and Argumentation in Climate Crisis Discourse 978-1-00-334290-8$ 52.95
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Review of Howard (2023): Multilingualism in the Andes: Policies, Politics, Power Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-07 Liying Dong, Sihong Zhang, Yalan Wang
This article reviews Multilingualism in the Andes: Policies, Politics, Power 9780367141226£ 120.00
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Review of Fariña (2023): Psychological Borders in Europe and the United States: Contemporary Nationalism, Nativism, and Populism Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-07 Tingting Hu, Nan Xu
This article reviews Psychological Borders in Europe and the United States: Contemporary Nationalism, Nativism, and Populism 9781793610614US$ 95.00
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Review of Bielsa (2023): A Translational Sociology: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Politics and Society Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-07 Bin Zhu, Qingliang Ren
This article reviews A Translational Sociology: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Politics and Society 978-1-032-11212-1
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Polarising metaphors in the Venezuelan Presidential Crisis Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-07 Silvia Peterssen, Augusto Soares da Silva
The 23rd of January 2019 marked the beginning of the Venezuelan Presidential Crisis, a unique socio-political conflict that confronted Nicolás Maduro, president of Venezuela, to the self-proclaimed leader Juan Guaidó. This paper explores the divisive power of conceptual metaphors in this context through the analysis of polarising metaphors, namely, metaphors that conceptualise ‘Us’ positively and/or
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Doing gender at the far right Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-07 Archibald Gustin
Debates over the difference between populism and nationalism have been at the forefront of political research on the far right in recent years. This paper aims to provide an empirical support for the claim that nationalism and populism are two distinct phenomena by analysing the articulations of both discourses in Vlaams Belang gender politics. In this perspective, this paper starts by presenting Benjamin
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“Türkiye,” not “Turkey” Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-07 Ali Fuad Selvi
This paper critically examines the recent presidential memorandum that replaced the Anglicized exonymic version “Turkey” with the endonym “Türkiye” as a conscious, performative and public relations campaign at both national and international levels. On the surface, this change addresses populist sociolinguistic hypersensitivities surrounding the connotations of the term “turkey” while simultaneously
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New opportunities for discourse studies Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-06-07 Katy Brown
This paper proposes a methodological framework that integrates poststructuralist Discourse Theory (DT), Critical Discourse Studies (CDS) and Corpus Linguistics (CL). While previous research has discussed potential compatibility between combinations of these approaches, there have been few attempts to bring them all together into a cohesive research programme. Fostering dialogue between diverse methodological
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Review of Al-Shboul (2023): The Politics in Climate Change Metaphors in the U.S. Discourse: Conceptual Metaphor Theory and Analysis from an Ecolinguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis Perspective Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Xin Zhong, Xiaoyu Ren
This article reviews The Politics in Climate Change Metaphors in the U.S. Discourse: Conceptual Metaphor Theory and Analysis from an Ecolinguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis Perspective
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Review of Brookes & Baker (2021): Obesity in the news: Language and Representation in the Press Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Xiaoli Fu, Yaoting Zhang
This article reviews Obesity in the news: Language and Representation in the Press 9781108836395
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Of infiltrators and wild beasts Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Massimiliano Demata
This paper addresses Benjamin Netanyahu’s border discourse in the context of radical right-wing populism. It discusses how, in the speeches and statements appearing in his official government website, Netanyahu construes groups located spatially outside Israel’s borders, mainly terrorists and migrants (the “wild beasts” and the “infiltrators”), as existential threats to Israel. The aim is to prove
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Border-making as illiberal politics Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 James Wesley Scott
Radical Right-wing populism frequently involves ‘divide and rule’ strategies as a means to attain and consolidate political power. In the cases of Viktor Orban’s political regime in Hungary and Donald Trump’s four-year presidency (and its aftermath), we find a pronounced attempt to create narrative hegemony of a sense of nation built upon Christian civilization and foundationalist understandings of
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Bordering and crisis narratives to illiberal ends Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Andras Szalai
This paper draws lessons from security and populism studies to theorize how radical right-wing populism (RRWP) utilizes borders as a symbolic resource in crisis narratives to clearly frame an “Us” and a threatening “Them”. By analyzing the Hungarian Orbán regime’s evolving rhetoric on borders, the paper illustrates how populists employ crisis narratives not to mitigate, but exacerbate ontological insecurities
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‘They will not survive here’ Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Sonja Pietiläinen
To justify the hardening of borders the populist radical right sometimes uses environmental rhetoric to frame migrants as a threat. The radical right’s environmental politics has been analysed through a focus on state borders, but less attention has been paid to the (re)production of bordering within and beyond the nation-state and to the racialising effects of such rhetoric, in other words how racial
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Commemoration and radical right-wing populism in European borderlands Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Christian Lamour
The success of radical right-wing populist (RRWP) parties is based on discourses displaying “power geometries” (Massey 1993, 1999). These involve the representation of power relations, with on one side a globalized elite, boosting the mobility of human beings, goods and capital across borders, and on the other side, a territorially embedded people subject to this borderless mobility. Power geometries
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A fence of opportunity Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 José Javier Olivas Osuna
This article deconstructs the parliamentary discourses regarding two migratory incidents in Ceuta, May 2021, and Melilla, June 2022, when hundreds of people attempted to cross the fences that separate Morocco from Spain. Most of them were immediately deported, many injured, and several died. This analysis compares the density of populist, anti-populist, re-bordering, and de-bordering references in
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Positioning antagonistic discourses in the (de)bounded spaces of power Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-05-21 Christian Lamour, Oscar Mazzoleni
Scholarship has underlined how radical right-wing populism (RRWP) emphasizes border control aiming to protect the “people”. Although increasing attention is being paid to the discursive dimensions of border construction, the complexity of the phenomenon suggests the need for further analysis in an interdisciplinary perspective and with an emphasis on the geometry of spatial powers (Massey 1999, 2005)
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BIOMETRIC CITIZENS in smart cities Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Rania Magdi Fawzy
This article addresses the socio-cognitive conceptualizations of the notion of ‘citizenship’ within the space of smart cities. It discusses how smart cities expos are endowed with ideological bearings that mark a shift in these conceptualizations. This ideological shift is explored in the policy releases of Barcelona expo media centre 2019/2020 as retrieved from the Smart City Expo World Congress website
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The aesthetic values of the semiotic choices in Arab protests Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Ali Badeen Mohammed Al-Rikaby
This paper examines protest language from the late Arab Spring uprisings, more specifically in Tunisia, Egypt and Iraq – identified as the “Facebook Upheavals”. It explores the discursive aspects of these processes through which social protest and dissent are constructed and different forms of communication and expression are mobilized. It also examines how the various modes of representation and dissemination
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“Does being pretty help?” Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Miri Cohen-Achdut, Leon Shor
The article analyzes debut interviews of female Israeli politicians, in which the interviewees are faced with questions or statements that imply that their gender, ethnicity or background prevent them from fulfilling their function as politicians successfully, in accordance with the “Gendered mediation thesis” (GoodYear-Grant 2013). We focus on the interviewees’ responses to these questions, and particularly
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Disalignment in the EU Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Valeria Franceschi
European Union (EU) institutions are highly multilingual environments where international communication is very goal-oriented, as they produce and define policies and regulations applied to all member states. This paper aims at exploring how disagreements and conflicting opinions are conveyed in such contexts through the qualitative analysis of debates in recorded meetings of the European Parliament
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The groundwork of Putin’s war Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Olga Mennecke
Every ideology aims at constructing specific representations of reality that many people can easily adopt. In this paper, mental models described as cognitive representations of reality are used to explain how people come to their beliefs. Applying Johnson-Laird’s theoretical concept, I present mental models reconstructed by means of a qualitative analysis of key lexemes in the Crimean speech of Vladimir
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Borderless fear? Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Daniel Thiele, Mojca Pajnik, Birgit Sauer, Iztok Šori
Studies have highlighted differences between right-wing populism in Western and Central Eastern Europe but suggested that discourses have been converging since the so-called “refugee crisis” in 2015. This article examines this claim by focusing on right-wing populist frames and affective communication on migration in Austria and Slovenia. Taking a communication-centred approach, the study is based
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Mass identifications and mythical violence Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Agustín Lucas Prestifilippo
Whoever intends to answer the question about how collective identities are articulated today in capitalist societies cannot ignore the task of conceptually and empirically articulating two differentiated issues: on the one hand, the anomic situations of disintegration, in which the individualizing logic of neoliberal ideology takes center stage; on the other, the emergence of new phenomena of social
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Review of Almanna & House (2023): Translation Politicised and Politics Translated Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Yang Xu
This article reviews Translation Politicised and Politics Translated 9781800794467
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Review of Deringer & Ströbel (2022): International Discourses of Authoritarian Populism: Varieties and Approaches Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Guodong Jiang, Jiayi Zhang
This article reviews International Discourses of Authoritarian Populism: Varieties and Approaches 9781032315614$ 73.99
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Review of Rajandran & Lee (2023): Discursive Approaches to Politics in Malaysia: Legitimising Governance Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Lei Zhao, Haijuan Yan
This article reviews Discursive Approaches to Politics in Malaysia: Legitimising Governance 978-981-19-5334-7
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Review of Serafis (2023): Authoritarianism on the Front Page: Multimodal Discourse and Argumentation in Times of Multiple Crises in Greece Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Jacopo Castaldi
This article reviews Authoritarianism on the Front Page: Multimodal Discourse and Argumentation in Times of Multiple Crises in Greece
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Constitutive representation of womanhood Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Meral Ugur-Cinar, Fatma Yol
This article analyzes the speeches of Turkish female parliamentarians during the headscarf debate. We examine how deputies with different political and ideological predilections discursively construct women’s rights and employ legitimation strategies to validate their policy position. The findings reveal that on the one hand, the female deputies use different legitimation strategies to justify arguments
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The discursive construction of solidarity by Ghanaian female parliamentarians Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Kwabena Sarfo Sarfo-Kantankah, Richmond Sadick Ngula, Mark Nartey
Research on issues of women has largely focused attention on, among others, power asymmetries and gender stereotypes, with less emphasis on positive linguistic mechanisms of women. Drawing on a critical discourse analytical approach and using Ghanaian parliamentary debates as data, this paper examines how female members of parliament (MPs) construct solidarity. The paper finds that, first, Ghanaian
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Self-promotion, ideology and power in the social media posts of Nigerian Female Political Leaders Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Ebuka Elias Igwebuike, Lily Chimuanya
This article examines how Nigerian female political leaders (NFPLs) exploit self-presentation strategies to formulate and promote social justice. Using insights from critical discourse analysis and Jones and Pittman’s (1982) self-presentation strategies, and with a data set from the verified Facebook and Twitter accounts of two female ministers and three female senators, the study investigates how
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The construction of agency in the discourse of Barbados’ prime minister Mia Mottley Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Mark Nartey
Informed by a critical discourse analytical approach to agency, this paper examines the construction of agency in the speeches of Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados. The analysis reveals that she enacts her agency in three main ways: (1) constructing strong and decisive leadership, (2) sculpting a ‘prophetess’ image and (3) issuing a clarion call to action. These processes enable her to project
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The construction and legitimation of Elisa Loncón as a Mapuche female political leader on Instagram Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Carolina Pérez-Arredondo, Camila Cárdenas-Neira, Luis Cárcamo-Ulloa
This study analyzed the multimodal discursive strategies Elisa Loncón, a Mapuche linguist and renowned academic, used on Instagram to position herself as a sociopolitical leader during her tenure as president of the Chilean Constitutional Convention. 811 Instagram posts from her account were downloaded from 15 January 2021 until 15 January 2022. From this, 81 of the most interacted posts were selected
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Examining the communication of female political leaders in the Global South Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Mark Nartey
This Special Issue expands on the ongoing dialogue on the decolonial project by bringing together thought-provoking papers that examine the communication of female political leaders in the Global South. It draws on data from West Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean and the Middle East to elucidate how female politicians deploy language (including multimodal forms) to position themselves in the political
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Review of Closs Stephens (2022): National Affects: The Everyday Atmospheres of Being Political Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Leila Wilmers
This article reviews National Affects: The Everyday Atmospheres of Being Political
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Review of Yu (2022): Moral Metaphor System: A Conceptual Metaphor Approach Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Jinyan Li, Zi Ouyang
This article reviews Moral Metaphor System: A Conceptual Metaphor Approach 978-0-19-286632-5£ 75.00
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Review of Fetzer & Weizman (2019): The Construction of ‘Ordinariness’ across Media Genres Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Wen Li, Fenghui Dai
This article reviews The Construction of ‘Ordinariness’ across Media Genres 978-9-027-20428-8€ 95.00
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Review of Nartey (2022): Political Myth-making, Populist Performance and Nationalist Resistance: Examining Kwame Nkrumah’s Construction of the African Unity Dream Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Ebuka Elias Igwebuike
This article reviews Political Myth-making, Populist Performance and Nationalist Resistance: Examining Kwame Nkrumah’s Construction of the African Unity Dream 978-1-032-10916-9
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Review of Demata (2023): Discourses of Borders and the Nation in the USA: A Discourse-historical Analysis Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Baoqin Wu
This article reviews Discourses of Borders and the Nation in the USA: A Discourse-historical Analysis £ 39.199781032263687
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“You are fake news” Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Lihong Quan, Jinlong Ma
Using the methodology of conversation analysis and a modified analytical framework, this article attempts to characterize and investigate Trump’s practices to resist the agendas of the interviewers’ questions during the press briefings held by the Trump Administration in 2020. Statistical data show that Trump mainly used four types of overt resistant response practices in order of decreasing frequency:
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A meta-discursive analysis of engagement markers in QAnon anti-immigration comments Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Sahar Rasoulikolamaki, Alena Zhdanava, Noor Aqsa Nabila Mat Isa, Mohd Nazriq Noor Ahmad, Surinderpal Kaur
To better understand QAnon’s anti-immigration rhetoric, the study conducted a meta-discursive analysis of one of the group’s active Telegram channels by drawing on Hyland’s (2005) model of interaction. Specifically, engagement markers in their immigration-related discourse were analyzed to see how they contribute to endorsing the group’s macro conspiratorial arguments. The results illustrate a complex
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A meaningless buzzword or a meaningful label? How do Spanish politicians use populismo and populista on Twitter? Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Nadezda Shchinova
While there is substantial research on populism and populist discourse, research on discourses about populism is still developing. Scholars highlight the need to understand why populism is so widely used and what the rapid spread of this socio-political keyword tells us about political and media discourse. The main objective of this paper is therefore to understand discourses on populism. To this aim
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“There is new technology here that can perform miracles” Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Søren Beck Nielsen
This paper puts the spotlight on the discursive practices by which politicians, interest group representatives, and other influential public figures in effect promote climate inaction by conveying confidence in technological innovation. Data consist of policy debates on prominent public service television in Denmark. The study uses Discursive Psychology to examine how references to technological innovation
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“Britain was already cherry-picking from the European tree without bothering to water the soil or tend to its branches” Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Denise Milizia
Starting from the ambivalent discursive constructions of belongings and attachments, this paper is a description of the uneasy and uncomfortable relation between the UK and the ‘continent’. It discusses the historical British insular attitude looking at the metaphorical language used around Brexit, with a special emphasis on the metaphor “have one’s cake and eat it”, referring to the “cherry-picking”
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National identity revisited Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-17 Nino Guliashvili
National Identity is a discursively constructed complex entity which can reshape an image of a nation. Even one person powerful enough to be a representative of the whole nation can promote a collective sense of nationality/patriotism and sovereignty of the country in line with social, historical, or most importantly, a versatile geopolitical context. The present study is an illustration of how lexical
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Review of Musolff & Breeze (2022): Pandemic and Crisis Discourse Communicating COVID-19 and Public Health Strategy Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Qian Ma
This article reviews Pandemic and Crisis Discourse Communicating COVID-19 and Public Health Strategy 978-1-350-23269-3
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Review of Chun (2022): Applied Linguistics and Politics Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Qijun Song
This article reviews Applied Linguistics and Politics 978-1-350-09823-7£ 140.00
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Review of Akbari (2020): Iran’s Language Planning Confronting English Abbreviations: Persian Terminology Planning Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Lingyun Lv, Renqiang Wang
This article reviews Iran’s Language Planning Confronting English Abbreviations: Persian Terminology Planning 9783030353827€ 51.99
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Review of Lütge, Merse & Rauschert (2022): Global Citizenship in Foreign Language Education: Concepts, Practices, Connections Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Xiaoxiao Song
This article reviews Global Citizenship in Foreign Language Education: Concepts, Practices, Connections 9781003183839
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Review of Livnat, Shukrun-Nagar & Hirsch (2020): The Discourse of Indirectness: Cues, Voices and Functions Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Yuan Ping
This article reviews The Discourse of Indirectness: Cues, Voices and Functions 9789027260567€95.00$143.00
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Review of Demasi, Burke & Tileagă (2021): Political communication: Discursive perspectives Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Xinyue Wang, Enhua Guo
This article reviews Political communication: Discursive perspectives 978-3-030-60222-2
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Dimensions of time and space in narratives for climate action Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Emma Frances Bloomfield
Addressing climate change requires engaging with the fluid, dynamic, and amorphous narrative of humanature relationships. I view environmental rhetoric as practices of storytelling that structure reality, guide actions, and shape understanding of the environment. Through rhetorical criticism, I analyzed fragments of climate activist discourse related to the narratives’ temporal and spatial scopes.
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Discourses on gender in climate change adaptation projects of Bangladesh Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09
Abstract The study examines why certain discourses on gender are more powerful than others in describing intentions for gender inclusion in development projects. A critical discourse analysis was carried out on texts of climate change adaptation projects implemented during 2009–2020 in rural Bangladesh. This article argues that gender is currently not considered enough in climate action and that gender
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“Hope dies – Action begins” Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Hanna E. Morris
Drawing upon motifs of death, mass extinction, and predictions of chaos and collapse, the UK-based Extinction Rebellion (XR) demarcates itself as a different kind of environmental movement precisely because it “tells the truth” (in XR’s own words) about the climate crisis during a time of supposed false hope, denial, and delusion. In this paper, I analyze – through a critical discourse analysis (CDA)
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From controversy to common ground Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Julia Litofcenko, Andrea Vogler, Michael Meyer, Martin Mehrwald
Once a concept of the radical environmentalist movement, the term sustainability was incorporated into the hegemonic discourse. Prior research argues that this occurred through a process in which the original controversy between ecological and economic issues has evolved from an antagonist opposition to a broad concurrence. While this development has mainly been analysed qualitatively, we apply quantitative
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ICT environmentalism and the sustainability game Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Hunter Vaughan, Anne Pasek, Nicholas R. Silcox, Nicole Starosielski
Over the past three decades, corporate branding has trended strongly towards environmental conscientiousness and green rhetoric, often heralded under the term “sustainability” – a broad and mutable rhetorical strategy that not only serves industry self-interest but is mobilized by civil society actors as well. This tension is especially apparent in the information communication technologies (ICT) sector
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Rhetorical (ir)responsibility in the Australian Parliament Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Simon McLaughlin, Franzisca Weder
In this conceptual paper, we differentiate between political decisions and the conversations where these decisions are discussed and facilitated. We complement existing work on argumentation in political communication by applying Aristotle’s Rhetoric to the study of climate change debate. We show how Aristotle’s principles for ethical and rational political speech work toward audience trust and encourage
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Anthropomorphism, anthropocentrism, and human-orientation in environmental discourse Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Casey R. Schmitt
This article surveys and reflects upon the influence of anthropomorphism in environmental and sustainability discourses. It summarizes key perspectives on and tensions surrounding anthropomorphizing rhetorics, ultimately arguing that such rhetorics need not be anthropocentric. The article first defines core concepts and terminology, including anthropomorphism and anthropocentrism. It then provides
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Cultivation of sustainability in a discourse of change Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 Franzisca Weder
Sustainability has been well used (and abused) as “buzz-word”, label or language token for certain behavior and action in political, organizational and increasingly in individual communication. Based on critical approaches in language, discourse and communication studies, the paper explores potential processes of normalization of sustainability as a new norm, discusses new theories and methodological
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Review of Feldman (2021): When Politicians Talk: The Cultural Dynamics of Public Speaking Journal of Language and Politics (IF 1.7) Pub Date : 2023-08-01 Kai Zhao
This article reviews When Politicians Talk: The Cultural Dynamics of Public Speaking 978-981-16-3578-6US$ 149.99