In:Analyzing Genres in Political Communication: Theory and practice
Edited by Piotr Cap and Urszula Okulska
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 50] 2013
► pp. 135–185
Chapter 4. The television election night broadcast
A macro genre of political discourse
Published online: 16 July 2013
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.50.06lau
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.50.06lau
Election night broadcasts are instances of a macro-genre which consists of a complex, ordered assembly of interlocking genres. The emergent character of the news, the liveness of the broadcast and its multi-focal character make for a number of typical genres and genre sequences. The chapter provides an overview of the area of research and a framework of analysis, drawing on DA, CA, systemic functional linguistics, pragmatics, semiotics and sociology. The genres studied are reports and comments (soft and hard news, audio-visual presentation of statistics) and Declaration sequences, comprising a running-up sequence (reports, interviews), and the Declaration of results at constituency level. The data are from the BBC election night on the 1997 UK parliamentary elections. The focus is on the discourse of journalists, not of politicians, and on the interplay of the verbal and visual channels.
Cited by (5)
Cited by five other publications
Hoffmann, Christian R.
Albalat-Mascarell, Ana
Wilks-Heeg, Stuart & Peter Andersen
Thornborrow, Joanna & Louann Haarman
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