In:Perspectives in Politics and Discourse
Edited by Urszula Okulska and Piotr Cap
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 36] 2010
► pp. v–viii
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Published online: 16 June 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.36.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.36.toc
Table of contents
Acknowledgements
Part I. Introduction
Chapter 1. Analysis of Political Discourse: Landmarks, challenges and prospects
Part II. Classification and naming in political rhetoric
Chapter 2. Political metaphor and bodies politic
Chapter 3. New bodies: Beyond illness, dirt, vermin and other metaphors of terror
Chapter 4. Legitimation through differentiation: Discursive construction of Jacques Le Worm Chirac as an opponent to military action
Chapter 5. Labeling and mislabeling in American political discourse: A survey based on insights of independent media monitors
Part III. Critical insights into political communication
Chapter 6. President Bush’s address to the nation on U.S. policy in Iraq: A critical discourse analysis approach
Chapter 7. Proximizing objects, proximizing values: Towards an axiological contribution to the discourse of legitimization
Chapter 8.Friends and allies: The rhetoric of binomial phrases in a corpus of U.S. defense speeches
Chapter 9. The marketization of institutional discourse: The case of the European Union
Chapter 10. Performing the world of politics through the discourse of institutional correspondence in Late Middle and Early Modern England
Part IV. Voices of mediatized politics
Chapter 11. Hedging in political discourse: The Bush 2007 press conferences
Chapter 12. Direct e-communication: Linguistic weapons in a political weblog
Chapter 13. The language of political opinion: Discourse, rhetoric and voting behavior
Chapter 14. Political communication: Mediated by translation
Chapter 15. Media practices in reporting political crises
Part V. Politicizing ‘linguistic human rights’
Chapter 16. The practice and politics of multilingualism
Chapter 17. Multilingual development in Germany in the crossfire of ideology and politics
Chapter 18. Against the assimilationist tide: Nurturing Puerto Rican children’s bilingual, bicultural, and academic development in preschool
Chapter 19. How language affects two components of racial prejudice? A socio-psychological approach to linguistic relativism
Part VI. Conclusion
Chapter 20. Exploring ‘political communication(s)’: Contexts, procedures and outlook
Contributors
Subject index
