Results for ' social media critical discourse studies'

985 found
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  1.  1
    Unravelling social media critical discourse studies (SM-CDS) – four approaches to studying social media through the critical lens.Susanne Kopf - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    This paper explores the evolution of Social Media Critical Discourse Studies (SM-CDS) and, in this context, outlines four essential approaches for critical research on social media and the underlying communicative paradigm. Thus, the paper adds to existing research in two ways. First, it provides a conceptualisation and visualisation that integrates Digital Discourse Analysis, Critical Discourse Studies, and the critical discourse-analytical study of social media. Second, (...)
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  2.  28
    Digital meaning-making across content and practice in social media critical discourse studies.Majid KhosraviNik - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (2):119-123.
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  3.  6
    Visibility and meaningful recognition for First Peoples: A critical discourse studies approach to communication, culture and conflict intersections in seeking social justice.Godfrey A. Steele - 2020 - Discourse and Communication 14 (5):489-511.
    Conflict revolves around communication and culture intersections. This interplay has historical antecedents and contemporary applications. Conflicts involving Indigenous Peoples and colonizers appear in literary representations, and contests between communities and cultures in historical, political and social settings. Amnesty International reports Indigenous Peoples’ realities and efforts to lobby for social justice. One effort is in becoming visible and seeking meaningful recognition examined in media coverage of the First Peoples’ holiday in Trinidad and Tobago, and resonates in conflicts reported (...)
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  4.  54
    Representations of LGBTQ+ issues in China in its official English-language media: a corpus-assisted critical discourse study.Guofeng Wang & Xueqin Ma - 2021 - Critical Discourse Studies 18 (2):188-206.
    ABSTRACT This corpus-assisted critical discourse study examines news reports published by China’s official English-language media from 2000 to 2018, with the goal of understanding how they represent LGBTQ+ issues within the China’s socio-political context. Analysis reveals that the discussion of LGBTQ+-related topics has been consistently discouraged in China’s official English-language media, and the few news reports which have appeared in these media sources have focused on preventing the spread of HIV/aids through homosexual behaviors, on promoting (...)
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  5.  16
    The age of crime: A cognitive-linguistic critical discourse study of media representations and semantic framings of youth offenders in the Uruguayan media.Maria Julios-Costa - 2017 - Discourse and Communication 11 (4):362-385.
    This study integrates corpus-assisted text analysis with frame semantics to study a social problem. Taking a cognitive-linguistic approach to critical discourse studies, in this article I examine the linguistic construction of minors in a corpus of 489 articles from the Uruguayan newspaper El País in the context of the so-called ‘Criminal Imputability Referendum’. Throughout, I focus on the construal operation of framing and identify a host of discursive patterns via which minors and adolescents are recurrently placed (...)
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  6.  27
    Social media discourses of feminist protest from the Arab Levant: digital mirroring and transregional dialogue.Eleonora Esposito & Francesco L. Sinatora - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (5):502-522.
    This paper proposes the concept of digital mirroring to explore and contextualise post-Arab Spring digital feminism in the Levant within a critical discourse framework. Digital mirroring illustrates the way in which contemporary Arab feminist groups articulate their digital presence orienting toward the vertical dimension of their sociopolitical contexts and toward the horizontal dimension characterised by the digital practices of other feminist movements in the region. We observed this phenomenon through the analysis of a multimodal corpus of Facebook and (...)
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  7.  57
    Social media and terrorism discourse: the Islamic State’s (IS) social media discursive content and practices.Majid KhosraviNik & Mohammedwesam Amer - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (2):124-143.
    ABSTRACT he paper examines the digital practices and discourses of the Islamic State when exploiting Social Media Communication environments to propagate their jihadist ideology and mobilise specific audiences. It draws on insights from Social Media Critical Discourse Studies, observational approaches, and visual content/semiotic analysis. The paper maintains the complementary nature of technological practice and discursive content in the process of meaning-making in digital jihadist discourse. The study shows that digital practices of strategic (...)
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  8.  25
    Ethical aspects of voice assistants: a critical discourse analysis of Indonesian media texts.Anisa Aini Arifin & Thomas Taro Lennerfors - 2022 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 20 (1):18-36.
    Purpose Voice assistant technology is one of the fastest-growing artificial intelligence applications at present. However, the burgeoning scholarship argues that there are ethical challenges relating to this new technology, not the least related to privacy, which affects the technology’s acceptance. Given that the media impacts public opinion and acceptance of VA and that there are no studies on media coverage of VA, the study focuses on media coverage. In addition, this study aims to focus on (...) coverage in Indonesia, a country that has been underrepresented in earlier research. Design/methodology/approach The authors used critical discourse analysis of media texts, focusing on three levels to study how VA technology was discussed in the Indonesian context and what power relations frame the representation. In total, 501 articles were collected from seven national media in Indonesia from 2010 to 2020 and the authors particularly focus on the 45 articles that concern ethics. Findings The ethical topics covered are gender issues, false marketing, ethical wrongdoing, ethically positive effects, misuse, privacy and security. More importantly, when they are discussed, they are presented as constituting no real critical problem. Regarding discursive practices, the media coverage is highly influenced by foreign media and most of the articles are directed to well-educated Indonesians. Finally, regarding social practices, the authors hold that the government ideology of technological advancement is related to this positive portrayal of VAs. Originality/value First, to provide the first media discourse study about ethical issues of VAs. Second, to provide insights from a non-Western context, namely, Indonesia, which is underrepresented in the research on ethics of VAs. (shrink)
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  9.  88
    Unpacking ‘baby man’ in Chinese social media: a feminist critical discourse analysis.Yifan Chen & Qian Gong - 2024 - Critical Discourse Studies 21 (4):400-417.
    This paper argues that the proliferation of the new term ‘baby man’ has an impact on reconstructing established gender relationships and resisting China's authoritarian political power in a highly-censored online environment. This study employs feminist critical discourse analysis to investigate how Chinese feminism adopts the discursive construction of ‘baby man’ and how they echo the complex historical and sociocultural backgrounds through a case study of 43 posts containing ‘baby man’ on Chinese social media. The finding suggests (...)
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  10.  82
    US news media portrayal of Islam and Muslims: a corpus-assisted Critical Discourse Analysis.Mahmoud Samaie & Bahareh Malmir - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (14):1351-1366.
    This article exploits the synergy of critical discourse studies and Corpus Linguistics to study the pervasive representation of Islam and Muslims in an approximate 670,000-word corpus of US news media stories published between 2001 and 2015. Following collocation and concordance analysis of the most frequent topics or categories which revolve around the representation of Islam and Muslims in US news stories, the Discourse-Historical Approach to critical discourse analysis was adopted to investigate how the (...)
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  11.  37
    Proximization, prosumption and salience in digital discourse: on the interface of social media communicative dynamics and the spread of populist ideologies.Monika Kopytowska - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (2):144-160.
    ABSTRACT The objective behind the present article is two-fold. Firstly, departing from the assumption that distance and salience dynamics are key to both functioning and impact of the media, we aim to present a new theoretical perspective on social media discourse understood as both product and process – Media Proximization Approach – and thus shed light on the exploratory potential of Social Media Critical Discourse Studies paradigm. In J. Flowerdew, & (...)
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  12.  35
    Snyder and Habermas on the war in Ukraine: a critical discourse analysis of elite media discourse in Germany.Helmut Gruber - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    This article presents a critical qualitative study of two opinion articles, written by two eminent scholars (Jürgen Habermas and Timothy Snyder), on the German government’s hesitant arms supply for Ukraine during the first phase of the Russian war of aggression in 2022. The main aim of the article is the uncovering of the discursive practices of critique performed by two major public intellectuals. This case study thus allows insights into the simplistic representation of the Russo-Ukrainian war in German elite (...)
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  13.  40
    Media portrayal of hackers in China Daily and The New York Times: A corpus-based critical discourse analysis.Dandi le ChengLi & Jiamin Pei - 2022 - Discourse and Communication 16 (5):598-618.
    This study draws on a synergy of Corpus Linguistics and Critical Discourse Studies to scrutinize the portrayal of hackers in China Daily and The New York Times in the 21st century, primarily revolving around the main social actors and targets in hacking. This study demonstrates that both media share a positive transformation of the image-building of hackers in the 21st century. Besides, countries are salient social actors in hacker media discourse and the (...)
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  14. The Portrayal of Islam and Muslims in Western Media: A Critical Discourse Analysis.Saman Rezaei, Kamyar Kobari & Ali Salami - 2019 - Cultura 16 (1):55-73.
    With the realization of the promised global village, media, particularly online newspapers, play a significant role in delivering news to the world. However, such means of news circulation can propagate different ideologies in line with the dominant power. This, coupled with the emergence of so-called Islamic terrorist groups, has turned the focus largely on Islam and Muslims. This study attempts to shed light on the image of Islam being portrayed in Western societies through a Critical Discourse Analysis (...)
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  15.  4
    Ruminant livestock and climate change: critical discourse moments in mainstream and farming sector news media.Philippa Simmonds, Damian Maye & Julie Ingram - forthcoming - Agriculture and Human Values:1-20.
    There is ongoing contestation around greenhouse gas emissions from ruminant livestock and how society should respond. Media discourses play a key role in agenda setting for the general public and policymakers, and may contribute to polarisation. This paper examines how UK news media portrayed ruminant livestock’s impact on climate change between 2016 and 2021. The analysis addresses a gap in the literature by comparing discourses in national and farming sector newspapers using a qualitative approach. Four national and two (...)
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  16.  2
    Political Discourse in Arabic Media: A Critical Discourse Analysis.Samah Ahmad Jameil, Shymaa Fouad AliAkbar & Sanae Tuama Oudah - forthcoming - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture:1258-1264.
    The present investigation is an endeavor to examine discourse from the CDA perspective. The following inquiries are the focus of the investigation: The extent to which the language employed in Trump's speech influenced individuals. Is the discourse beneficial or detrimental to the Egyptian populace? Additionally, which discursive strategies are implemented during their discourse? The study posits that speakers employ a variety of strategies, argumentation, and historical contexts to communicate their ideologies to their audience in order to secure (...)
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  17.  36
    The spatial, networked and embodied agency of social media: a critical discourse perspective on Banksy’s political expression.Bolette B. Blaagaard & Mette Marie Roslyng - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (2):212-226.
    ABSTRACT This article asks how social media changes and challenges critical agency through spatial, networked and embodied discourses? It argues that CDS has the potential to explore relations and contexts that go beyond the deliberative participatory, affective and exploitative conditions of social media. Employing a critical discursive reading of street artist Banksy’s mural of a Les Misérables-poster on the public wall across from the French embassy in London in 2016, we argue that social (...)
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  18.  14
    Reifying subjectivities: A critical discourse analysis of The Assam Tribune in Northeast India.Suanmuanlian Tonsing - 2022 - Discourse and Communication 16 (4):445-461.
    This article examines how colonial mentalities of subjectifying the people are reinstated in postcolonial Northeast India through the media. Using the Bodos as a context of the argument, the paper studies The Assam Tribune news headlines during the 2021 Assam Legislative Assembly election. By studying both micro- and macrostructures of news headlines, using critical discourse analysis, the article argues that the media continue to reify the subjective consciousness of the population as a discourse that (...)
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  19.  62
    Discourse of Self-Empowerment in Ariana Grande’s ‘thank u, next’ Album Lyrics: A Critical Discourse Analysis.Ekkarat Ruanglertsilp - 2022 - Journal for Cultural Research 26 (2):200-220.
    Due to the increasing concern about gender equity in the U.S., song lyrics with political activism are receiving more attention. As reflected through lyrics and the artist’s tumultuous life events, ‘thank u, next,’ Ariana Grande’s fifth album, has been reviewed by media outlets, such as Billboard as mirroring Grande’s public persona of self-empowerment. iTunes (2019) describes the album as Grande’s embraced position of – ‘complex, independent, tenacious and flawed.’ This study investigates how these claims came about by adopting Fairclough’s (...)
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  20.  8
    Responsibilization of weight management: a multimodal critical discourse analysis of losing weight articles in Chinese official WeChat posts.Xiang Huang - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    In response to the rising obesity rate in China, the Chinese government has used the social media platform WeChat to encourage the public to lose weight. This article investigates the losing weight posts in 健康中国 [Healthy China], the official WeChat account of the National Health Commission of the People’s Republic of China. Taking a multimodal critical discourse analysis approach, I identify the dominant discourses used to represent obesity and individuals related to obesity. One of the most (...)
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  21.  52
    The critical juncture of Brexit in media & political discourses: from national-populist imaginary to cross-national social and political crisis.Franco Zappettini & Michał Krzyżanowski - 2019 - Critical Discourse Studies 16 (4):381-388.
    Volume 16, Issue 4, September 2019, Page 381-388.
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  22.  39
    Centering marginalized voices: a discourse analytic study of the Black Lives Matter movement on Twitter.Mark Nartey - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (5):523-538.
    Recent studies on non-dominant or minority groups have begun to look at how their members reconstruct resistance, sculpt a positive identity for themselves and engage in solidarity formation for group empowerment. The present study contributes to this growing scholarship by examining the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement’s use of Twitter to promote an emancipatory agenda for Black communities/people. Based on the tweets produced by the BLM movement, I analyze various discursive mechanisms utilized by the movement to resist institutional oppression (...)
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  23.  75
    Online hate, digital discourse and critique: Exploring digitally-mediated discursive practices of gender-based hostility.Majid KhosraviNik & Eleonora Esposito - 2018 - Lodz Papers in Pragmatics 14 (1):45-68.
    The communicative affordances of the participatory web have opened up new and multifarious channels for the proliferation of hate. In particular, women navigating the cybersphere seem to be the target of a disproportionate amount of hostility. This paper explores the contexts, approaches and conceptual synergies around research on online misogyny within the new communicative paradigm of social media communication. The paper builds on the core principle that online misogyny is demonstrably and inherently a discourse; therefore, the field (...)
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  24.  33
    Discourses of celebrities on Instagram: digital femininity, self-representation and hate speech.Soudeh Ghaffari - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (2):161-178.
    ABSTRACT Social media has given way to information and prosumption-oriented discursive fields wherein individuals construct their own social identities. Although interactivity, multimodality, user-centeredness and accessibility are the unique aspects of digital media but the fact that digital media as effective spaces for representing extreme self/other representation while being anonymous and free from following social norms, can cause dysfunctional social behaviours such as cyber hate. Mirroring the normative notions of femininity, masculinity and gender stereotype (...)
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  25.  22
    A shifting collective identity: A critical discourse analysis of the child care advocacy association of canada's public messaging in 2005 and 2008.Rachel Langford & Brooke Richardson - 2015 - Critical Discourse Studies 12 (1):78-96.
    Faring poorly by international standards, out-of-home childcare in Canada is often described as ‘in crisis’. This study addresses how national childcare movement actors, who are overwhelmingly women, have discursively constructed their collective identity during two contrasting political climates. Data comprise publically available media releases produced in 2005 and 2008 by the Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada, a national grassroots childcare social movement organization. Guided by Fairclough's overarching framework for critical discourse analysis and Koller's approach to (...)
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  26.  67
    The Potential Relevance of the Test of the News by Lippmann and Merz for Critical Discourse Analysis.Eulalia Smuga-Fries - 2013 - Dialogue and Universalism 23 (1):161-170.
    This paper attempts to signal the potential relevance of A Test of the News, written by Lippmann and Merz, for Critical Discourse Analysis. It seems that the study is overlooked by CDA’s experts as a pioneering work in press analysis. In order to demonstrate links between CDA and the research, in the first part, the work of Lippmann and Merz is situated within a wider picture of the theoretical and historical background as well as common views on politics (...)
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  27. Narratives and responsibility in media framings of the (1973–1985) Uruguayan dictatorship: a critical discourse analysis. [REVIEW]Mariana Achugar, Natalia Uval, Betania Núñez, Amanda Muñoz, Julieta Núñez, José Gabriel Lagos & Facundo Franco - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    What is the role of the media in the construction of collectively shared ideas about the past? Our analysis of the coverage and framing of the dictatorship in current newspapers intends to contribute to the understanding of the ways in which media discourse uses the past to serve present political interests, related to an increase in revisionist political discourse. We conducted a discourse analysis of how the Uruguayan press approaches framing the latest dictatorship, to identify (...)
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  28.  45
    Communication ethic in social media: Analitical study of surah al-hujar't.Faizatun Khasanah - 2019 - Epistemé: Jurnal Pengembangan Ilmu Keislaman 14 (1):209-228.
    Commodification of religion in the social media public sphere is increasingly intense. This can be seen in the simultaneous election campaign that has justended. Political symbols are politicized and religious leaders have succeeded in shaping public opinion, especially on social media. As a result, social media has become an arena for discourse and rhetoric that no longer considers communication ethics. Using an philosophical approach, the paper examines ethical values on social media (...)
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  29.  10
    Critical discourse studies and technology: a multimodal approach to analysing technoculture.Ian Roderick - 2016 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing PLc.
    Defining technology : technology as apparatus -- Multimodal critical discourse analysis -- Analysing multimodal discourse : a toolkit approach -- Discourses of technology as progress -- Discourses of technological determinism -- Discourses of technological fetishism : (over)valuing technologies -- Discourses of technological (dis)satisfaction : consuming technologies.
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  30.  17
    Reacting to Black Lives Matter on Social Media: Pedagogical Implications for Social Studies Education.Joseph McAnulty - 2024 - Journal of Social Studies Research 48 (4):274-292.
    This Q methodological study explored the ways preservice and in-service social studies teachers engaged with a collection of social media posts about the Black Lives Matter movement. The study asked participants to share their reactions to the posts as well as how they would determine which posts they might present to their students in the classroom. The analysis of the Q sorts identified three subject positions available to these social studies teachers—labeled the Context Provider, (...)
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  31.  34
    Negotiating climate change in public discourse: insights from critical discourse studies.Guofeng Wang & Changpeng Huan - 2024 - Critical Discourse Studies 21 (2):133-145.
    This Special Issue collects five articles that are located in the present global context, and draw on methods from across critical discourse studies (CDS) to examine the interaction between material realities of climate change and discursive communication between different Parties and non-Party stakeholders in multimodal ways and on multiple platforms. To this end, it draws on discourses such as the UN speeches, UN documents, EU green deal policy, official documents submitted by African countries to the United Nations (...)
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  32.  27
    The sociocognitive approach in critical discourse studies and the phenomenological sociology of knowledge: intersections.Daniel Gyollai - 2022 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 21 (3):539-558.
    This article argues that phenomenological sociology has great potential to provide a strong theoretical support to the Sociocognitive Approach in Critical Discourse Studies. SCA is interested in the interconnections between knowledge, discourse and society while placing subjectivity in the centre of its framework. It looks into the correlative relationship between personal- and socially shared knowledge, and the significance of these correlations to discourse production and interpretation. Analogously, phenomenological sociology explores the interrelated structures of subjectivity, knowledge (...)
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  33.  40
    Evaluating the American-Chinese trade war on Chinese social media: discourses of nationalism and rectifying a humiliating past.Gwen Bouvier, Qiang Geng & Wenting Zhao - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    The US and China have both benefited greatly from their trading relationship. However, motivated by a US concern that their partner was becoming more of a rival, then-president Donald Trump began a ‘trade war’ in 2018. In US news outlets and, of particular interest here, on American social media platforms, China was represented as a global menace, with extreme xenophobia against Chinese people. Yet less is known about how Chinese people responded on social media to the (...)
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  34.  19
    Participation and deliberative discourse on social media – Wikipedia talk pages as transnational public spheres?Susanne Kopf - 2022 - Critical Discourse Studies 19 (2):196-211.
    ABSTRACT This paper focuses on the potential societal function of Wikipedia beyond serving as an encyclopedia. That is, it assesses both theoretically and empirically whether talk pages – Wikipedia discussion sites that accompany the encyclopedic entries and provide spaces for debates among Wikipedia editors – may function as transnational public spheres. Despite the increasing number of studies on citizen engagement and participation in the age of social media, Wikipedia as an example of the participatory internet has received (...)
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  35. Advancing Multimodal and Critical Discourse Studies: Interdisciplinary Research Inspired by Theo van Leeuwen’s Social Semiotics.[author unknown] - 2018
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  36.  24
    The discourse of the US alt-right online – a case study of the Traditionalist Worker Party blog.Nuria Lorenzo-Dus & Lella Nouri - 2021 - Critical Discourse Studies 18 (4):410-428.
    ABSTRACT The use of social media by extreme right groups and the self-proclaimed formation of the ‘alt-right’ in recent years have been linked to the rise in US white nationalism. Against a backdrop of widespread concern regarding the growing nature of the ‘alt-right’ phenomenon, this article responds to the pressing need to understand its appeal. Specifically, we examine the discursive means by which a hitherto unexamined US ‘alt-right’ group, the Traditionalist Worker Party, constructs its group identity and ideology (...)
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  37.  25
    From space to spatiality: critical spatial discourse analysis as a framework for the geo-graphing of media texts.Fulya Vatansever - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (1):18-35.
    The myriad ways in which spatiality, or socially produced space, impinges on media texts is the overarching concern of this study. Responding to Edward Soja’s call for an assertive foregrounding of a critical spatial perspective, this article is an ontological reassertion of space in relation to news media discourse and argues that the socially constructed spatiality of a journalistic text is just as revealingly significant as its historicality and sociality. Introduced here is Critical Spatial (...) Analysis (CSDA), a methodological framework that employs the spatiocultural theory of Bill Richardson to enable a mapping of the various aspects of spatiality informing media texts. Edward Said’s imaginative geographies is also drawn upon to advance a geographical notation and mapping of the territorial imaginations underlying news media texts. The fundamental assumption of CSDA is that space is not only actively constituted in media texts but also constitutes and that it can, and indeed must be read and interpreted as any other text. A sample column from Turkey’s Sabah newspaper will be used to illustrate the application of CSDA to press coverage of democracy to see what might be revealed of those real-and-imagined spaces that are interposed and obscured in the text’s background. (shrink)
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  38.  55
    Critique, Habermas and narrative (genre): the discourse-historical approach in critical discourse studies.Bernhard Forchtner - 2021 - Critical Discourse Studies 18 (3):314-331.
    Narratives are everywhere. We tell narratives about ourselves and we make the world meaningful through storytelling. We position others through the narratives we tell and are positioned by stories told about us. And yet, while narratives have, of course, been analysed in critical discourse studies (CDS), including in one of its most popular approaches, the discourse-historical approach (DHA), this article proposes to go a step further by systematically integrating the concept of narrative into the core of (...)
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  39.  16
    Investigating the language of conflict and peace in critical discourse studies.Innocent Chiluwa - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    This introduction to a Special Issue of Critical Discourse Studies (CDS) – dedicated to showcasing scholarly research into the language of conflict and peace, describes the general conceptual character of language in conflict initiation as well as in peace process. It further examines the potentials of linguistic representation in the construction of social and political realities that have strong implications for conflicts not only at the interpersonal level but also have consequences in terms of national and (...)
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  40.  1
    ‘Black people don’t do that’: a critical qualitative study of discursive barriers and black women’s digital well-being networks.Shanice Jones Cameron - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    The purpose of the current research was to explore and expose discourses that constrain how Black women engage with health and well-being practices, specifically long-distance running, therapy, and adhering to a vegan diet. The theoretical framework for this research builds upon Black feminist thought and the Foucauldian concepts governmentality and disciplinary power. I employed aspects of netnography and conducted 28 semi-structured interviews with Black millennial women in the United States. I argue that disciplinary power constrained how the Black women in (...)
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  41.  47
    Language and critique: some anticipations of critical discourse studies in Marx.Bob Jessop & Ngai-Ling Sum - 2018 - Critical Discourse Studies 15 (4):325-337.
    ABSTRACTWe examine Marx's critiques of language, politics, and capitalist political economy and show how these anticipated critical discourse and argumentation analysis and ‘cultural political economy’. Marx studied philology and rhetoric at university and applied their lessons critically. We illustrate this from three texts. The German Ideology critically explores language as practical consciousness, the division of manual and mental labor, the state, hegemony, intellectuals, and specific ideologies. The Eighteenth Brumaire studies the semantics and pragmatics of political language and (...)
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  42.  8
    Cultivating critical language awareness: unraveling populism in Trump’s inaugural address.Junling Zhu - 2024 - Semiotica 2024 (259):255-278.
    Recent literature has revealed the upsurge of populism in political and media discourses across the world. However, few studies have acknowledged the importance of cultivating critical language awareness among citizens in democracies. Drawing on Halliday’s Systemic Functional Linguistics and Fairclough’s Critical Discourse, this study critically analyzes Trump’s populist meaning-making choices in his inaugural address through both genre and register analysis to raise the urgency of cultivating citizens’ critical language awareness through language education. To better (...)
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  43.  28
    Young vs old? Truancy or new radical politics? Journalistic discourses about social protests in relation to the climate crisis.Diana Jacobsson - 2021 - Critical Discourse Studies 18 (4):481-497.
    ABSTRACT The aim of this critical discourse analysis is to examine how the agenda and actions of the global protest movement ‘Youth for Climate’ are understood and constructed in Swedish mainstream press and to highlight how the journalistic recontextualization contributes to empowering and disempowering the critical voices and their demands. The article problematizes the journalistic ideal of objectivity in the case of the climate crisis and adds to discussions about the role of media and journalism in (...)
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  44.  11
    Phil Graham and axiological discourse analysis: after neoliberalism.Allan Luke - 2025 - Critical Discourse Studies 22 (2):115-128.
    This is an essay introduction to a special edition of Critical Discourse Studies on the work of Phil Graham. It is a critical overview and reappraisal of his major interdisciplinary contribution to the field: an axiological approach that focuses on meaning and values in a materialist political economy of language. The contributors to this volume enlist Graham's approach to trace the aftermaths and discontents of neoliberalism: nothing less than resurgent nationalisms, monoculturalism and autocracy, fuelled by (...) media and digital communications. This new political economy of discourse raises substantive ethical and moral challenges for the future of critical discourse studies. (shrink)
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  45. On the discursive appropriation of the antinatalist ideology in social media.George Rossolatos - 2017 - The Qualitative Report 24 (2):208-227.
    Antinatalism, a relatively recent moral philosophical perspective and ideology that avows “it is better not to have ever existed,” has spawned a new social movement with an active presence in social media. This study draws on the discourse historical approach (DHA) to critical discourse analysis for offering a firm understanding as to how the collective identity of the Facebook antinatalist NSM is formed. The findings from the analysis of the situated interaction among the NSM’s (...)
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  46.  22
    A Critical Perspective on the Reflections of Religious Culture and Moral Knowledge Teachers in the Mainstream Media.Sümeyra Arican - 2019 - Dini Araştırmalar 22 (55 (15-06-2019)):97-120.
    The social status of teaching profession has rapidly plummeted in the Turkish society. This study discusses the societal aspect of social status and aims to critically analyse the representations of mainstream media about Religious Culture and Moral Knowledge teachers in Turkey as one of the societal reflections of teachers’ social statues. Although the dimensions of media effect on societal perceptions are not fully located, an indirect effect cannot be ignored. The study’s methodology, T. A. van (...)
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  47.  20
    Constructing undesirables: A critical discourse analysis of othering of Fulani nomads in the Ghanaian news media.Hans J. Ladegaard & Mark Nartey - 2021 - Discourse and Communication 15 (2):184-199.
    The activities of Fulani nomads in Ghana have gained considerable media attention and engendered continuing public debate. In this paper, we analyze the prejudiced portrayals of the nomads in the Ghanaian news media, and how these contribute to an exclusionist and a discriminatory discourse that puts the nomads at the margins of Ghanaian society. The study employs a critical discourse analysis framework and draws on a dataset of 160 articles, including news stories, editorials and op-ed (...)
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  48.  16
    Production and reception of Fathers' construction of their daughter’s sexuality on Twitter.Federica Formato - 2021 - Critical Discourse Studies 18 (6):637-654.
    ABSTRACT Research has found humour and gender to be linked, 96–113. doi:10.1016/j.pragma.2005.06.006; Kotthoff 2006, Gender and humor: The state of the art. Journal of pragmatics, 38, 4–25. doi:10.1016/j.pragma.2005.06.003), specifically within languages/cultures, The pragmatics of humour across discourse domains. John Benjamins, for jokes in Russian). In this respect, women are often subject of jokes and, in some cases, this reproduces the gendered imbalance of suitable roles in private and public spaces. In this paper, I examine the message of two jokes (...)
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    Brexit and the imaginary of ‘crisis’: a discourse-conceptual analysis of European news media.Michał Krzyżanowski - 2019 - Critical Discourse Studies 16 (4):465-490.
    This article explores the discourse-conceptual linkages between ‘Brexit’ and ‘crisis’ in European news media reporting about the UK referendum on leaving the European Union of 23 June 2016. The study examines media discourse about the Brexit vote in Austria, Germany, Poland and Sweden at the transformative moment in between the pre/after vote period. The conceptually-oriented critical discourse analysis shows how Brexit was not only constructed as an imaginary or a future crisis but also how (...)
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  50.  32
    Fabricating the American Dream in US media portrayals of Syrian refugees: A discourse analytical study.Christopher J. Jenks & Aditi Bhatia - 2018 - Discourse and Communication 12 (3):221-239.
    The months preceding and following the inauguration of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States have incited furious debate about the authenticity of media discourse in the shaping of reality, including in particular the reporting of refugees from predominantly Muslim regions and their resettlement in Western nations. Much of this debate is rooted in how opposing discourse clans, such as liberal and conservative ideologies, construct a narrative of nationhood around contested views of refugees. Examining (...)
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