Resuming Nimmo & Swanson: political language and communication Beyond “the voter, persuasion and political campaign model” (made of “dramatized rituals.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Answering the Shakespeare question Contextual features Situational factors Where is it set? Where is it set? Who is present? Who is present? What has.
Advertisements

SPORTS IN SOCIETY: SOCIOLOGICAL ISSUES AND CONTROVERSIES
Global Dimension Resources. Importance of Resources Global dimension covers such a vast area necessitates usage of range of material outside teacher’s.
Aspects of Culture.
Linking the Fairs to the 2013 Ontario Curriculum Social Studies 1 to 6 and History and Geography 7 and 8.
1. Overview of Applied Linguistics
Sports in Society: Issues & Controversies
Source: Gaventa, J. and Barrett, G., 2010, Working Paper 347, Institute of Development Studies (IDS), Brighton Organisation: Institute of Development Studies,
Communications: Language Thought and Society. In order for social scientists to understand how people organize their lives, carry out work, practice religions,
The Anthropology of Performance. ANTHROPOLOGICAL STUDIES OF EXPRESSIVE CULTURE All types/forms of expressive culture informal & formal forms “function"
 What is the main difference between psychology and sociology?
Part II: Preparation/Process Chapter Three: Communication.
DIGITAL CULTURE AND SOCIOLOGY session 3 – Susana Tosca Representation: Meanings and Symbols Digital Culture and Sociology.
DISCOURSE POWER AND ANALYSIS Broadly speaking, inculcation is the mechanism of power-holders who wish to preserve their power, while communication is.
Chapter 2 Perception. Perception is Important Differences in perception are widespread Not all differences are of equal importance Not everyone’s perceptions.
copyright (c) 2003 Allyn & Bacon Chapter 10 Teaching Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students This multimedia product and its contents are protected.
Intercultural Communication: The Basics
Verderber, Verderber, Sellnow © 2011 Cengage Learning COMM 2011 Chapter 2 Perceptions of Self and Others.
(c) 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Sports in Society: Issues & Controversies Chapter 1 The Sociology of Sport: What Is It and.
Week 3: Strategic Methodologies
Communication Degree Program Outcomes
Part 2 Professional Knowledge: Learning Theories, Neuroscience and Learning Theories, Conditions for Learning, Literacy, and Pedagogy.
Zolkower-SELL 1. 2 By the end of today’s class, you will be able to:  Describe the connection between language, culture and identity.  Articulate the.
Intercultural Language Teaching VU Teaching LOTE 2010 Andrew Ferguson
Dimensions of Human Behavior: Person and Environment
Theories About How People Construct Meaning Chapter Seven.
Recap 1 What is Communication? How do we Communicate? What is a Skill? Language Skills Types of Communication Styles of Communication The Communication.
Copyright © 2014 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Nursing Issues: A Call to Political Action Chapter 1.
7 Critical Literacy, Communication and Interaction 1 1.
©2007 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 2/e PPTPPT.
Qualitative Data Analysis: An introduction Carol Grbich Chapter 13: Structuralism and post structuralism.
Overview of Discourse Analysis 1. Pragmatics and Politeness Theory ( ) 2. Ethnography of Speaking ( ) 3. Interactional Sociolinguistics ( )
The Learning Sciences and Constructivism. Learning Sciences: interdisciplinary science based in psychology, education, computer science, philosophy, sociology,
THE NATURE OF TEXTS English Language Yo. Lets Refresh So we tend to get caught up in the themes on English Language that we need to remember our basic.
The nature of Texts: The ins and out of your folio CONTEXT CONTEXT CONTEXT.
Introduction to Linguistics Chapter 8: Language and Society
Hello, Everyone! Part I Review Exercises Questions 1. Define the following 4 terms: 1) bound morpheme 2) free morpheme 3) derivational morpheme 4) inflectional.
1. Focus Unit 5: The phenomena Language, Language as a (tangible, physical) symbolic system for communication Language as a window to the mind (internal.
Precursors of Structuralism Language Durkheim and idea of sacred/profane Linguistics Melds Sociology, the study of social action and interaction, with.
Language, Culture & Communication- the meaning of message Language, Culture & Communication- the meaning of message Dr. Harriet J. Ottenheimer Chapter.
Schneider: Discourse1 CHAPTER 12: DISCOURSE READ 656 Dr. Schneider.
Group interaction Cognitive and emotional processing Group decisions and records Subjective member assessments Tasks and/or purpose Group structure Member.
HYMES (1964) He developed the concept that culture, language and social context are clearly interrelated and strongly rejected the idea of viewing language.
Literary Terms English 11 The narrative perspective from which a story is told.
BBI3303 Language and Power. What is power? 1.Power as dominance Power as dominance entails domination, coercion and control of subordinate groups. It.
The Message Chapter 5.
Outline The impact of advertising How advertising communication works Message reception and response How brands work Chapter 6 How Advertising Works.
Copyright 2012 Delmar, a part of Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 6 Communication.
1 constructing an economic cognitive model using dialectics to explain the psycho-dynamic motion of economic decision-making Presented by Peter Baur University.
Communication/Discourse “Discourse can be described as a pattern of words, figures of speech, concepts, values, and symbols. A discourse is a coherent.
Taking on the identity of an inclusive practitioner
Frames of Analysis of Heritage Tourism Critical Discourse Analysis.
The Dynamics of Mass Communication Joseph R. Dominick Seventh Edition.
Tribal Critical Race Theory (TribalCrit) By Jill Waldera.
PERCEPTION. WHO ARE YOU? HOW DO YOU SEE THINGS? Perception is the process of being aware of and understanding the world Form, challenge, and reinforce.
Critical Discourse Analysis
CIV Class 2 january 23, 2015 Two approaches to analyzing cultural history Michel Foucault TS Kuhn Analyzing art.
Discourse Analysis Week 10 Riggenbach (1999) Chapter 1 - Quotes.
Genre Knowledge and Genre Analysis: 2 readings on Genre Thanks in part to Dr. Angela Rounsaville, Assistant Professor, Department of Writing and Rhetoric,
Discourse Analysis Before giving a simplistic definition of "discourse analysis ", it is expedient to look at some definitions and quotations from well.
Kathryn S. Hoff, JoAnn Kroll, Carol Fletcher chapter 2 Developing a Professional Perspective.
Maurizio Ambrosini, università di Milano, Integration versus Multiculturalism: An outdated dichotomy.
Grounded theory, discourse analysis and hermeneutics Part Two – Discourse Analysis ERPM001 Interpretive Methodologies Dr Alexandra Allan.
Chapter 4: Applied Linguistics and language learning/teaching.
Theme: Linguistics in General
Cultural studies is an academic field of critical theory and literary criticism  introduced by British academics in 1964.
Types of Conflict.
LANGUAGE, CULTURE, & SOCIETY
MEDIA STUDIES Theoretical Concepts REPRESENTATION STUART HALL.
HIST300: Historiography Fall 2012
Presentation transcript:

Resuming Nimmo & Swanson: political language and communication Beyond “the voter, persuasion and political campaign model” (made of “dramatized rituals that legitimize the power structures”)? It could be useful to think to Political discourse not only from “one context-based conception” but in a more general and articulated way, where we find different, but connected, questions: Persuasion; information processing; political behavior; media effects;

Nimmo & Swanson…(pp. 9-17) “What makes communication (and language) “political”?” Is it only question of “propaganda” or “campaign? Probably not… (Think about “culture” and “citizenship”, or social and political movements?) “Does political communication and discourse assume “special forms”? Beyond the “academic” or “disciplinary” divisions (they describe the “limits” of the problem), we can think to “political language” in terms of “textual effects”

Nimmo & Swanson…(pp.9-17) Two conceptions: a) society as a struggle for power; b) society as a search for shared understanding and consensus. It’s possible to go beyond this opposition: analyzing forms and nature of political language: Power is not “substantive”, it’s a relationship (Foucault) Political discourse,political language and meaning are the places where this relationship is “forged”, created.

Nimmo & Swanson…(pp.17-29) Political discourse and language is the place where power relations are created: within “strategic interactions”; what is it? It is important “to give greater attention to social bases of the processes through the meanings are constructed”: (“uses and gratifications research” (50s.60s); “agenda-setting research” (70s. 80s) (p.18) But we need to understand better what happens inside “messages” of political discourses.

Nimmo & Swanson…(pp.30-40) What is the link between “political discourses and language” and “political systems” System: political “machine” (State, institutions, etc.) made of different parts, integrated or connected…more or less; (importance of comparative analysis in political studies); An Old idea: input/output conception of system; Communication as “nerves” of a systems? (‘50s, ‘60s) New ideas: studying “belief systems” inside political systems;

Cultural systems as networks of values (which compose different patterns of meanings). But it’s now impossible to distinguish “political systems” from “communication”: cultures as systems which “filter”: social filters; “Cultures are not “disembodied ideas (schemas, attitudes), they are not merely cognitive” (beliefs, knowledges, actions…) “Social practices are institutions”.

Nimmo & Swanson…(2nd chapter (Corcoran on “Language and Politics”) Systematic nature of political language Importance of “silence”: in the sense of “interruptions, tones, pitchs and rythms, boundaries between words and phrases…” Meanings are made also of lies, silences, of not explicit declarations…

Political language and political learning Austin (‘50s, ‘60s): “How to do things with words” Not “speaking VS action”: but apeaking as action; Austin and sociolinguistics (70s, 80s): emphasizing function of language in “institutional hierachies, role behavior, and social power”. (vs Chomsky and the idea of “autonomous dimension of language”.

Linguistic “turn” in philosophy and political language Language as “labelling tool”; (p. 60) But also: Language constitutes reality and it is part of it (from British philosophy, to Structuralism and other philosophical trends from 40s to 60s); “Discourse theory” as radicalisation and generalisation of those ideas (“post-structuralism”) (pp.64-65): Discourse, constitutes a field: of “play”, action, discursive contests and all-out struggles”. “Study of language as “archaeology” (Foucault) of all existing discursive practices”

Discourse theory and political language Studying (from Foucault) “all existing and conceivable discursive practices (professional nomenclatures, stereotypes, legal codes, formal and informal speech settings…)”; (p. 65) “Power is embedded in existing discursive practices”; power is not “external force”; Language in broader sense becomes “Political”. But political discourse at the same time is a “special region”: “legislative” and “centers on action”.

Where is political language (and the role of passions and emotions) Discourse as a struggle over “meaning. Status, power and resources”. Political discourse is not a “personal dialogue”: public speech in which participants as well as public are defined in a specific way. Building meanings from oppositions The discourse is “inherently dynamic”. But the this dynamics is based on “opposing voices”, constructing differences. (pp ). It is necessary to identify: “methods of combat”, “lines of engagement.”