
Language, Politics and Media
The Hong Kong Protests
Special issue of Journal of Language and Politics (21:1)
Editors
[Journal of Language and Politics, 21:1] 2022. vi, 189 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 11 January 2022
Published online on 11 January 2022
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
Table of Contents
- An introduction to the special issue on “Language, Politics and Media: The Hong Kong protests”Ming Liu & Guofeng Wang | pp. 1–16
- Britain as a protector, a mediator or an onlooker? Examining the 2019–20 Hong Kong protests in British newspapersGuofeng Wang | pp. 17–36
- The politics of fear in Hong Kong protest representations: A corpus-assisted discourse studyMing Liu & Jingxue Ma | pp. 37–59
- Attitudinal stance towards the anti-extradition bill movement in China Daily and South China Morning Post : A corpus-assisted comparative analysisXiuling Cao, Danqi Zhang & Qianjun Luo | pp. 60–80
- Media portrayals of the Hong Kong Occupy Central Movement’s social actors: Multilevel and critical discourse analysisJanet Ho & Ming Ming Chiu | pp. 81–116
- “We shall not flag or fail, we shall go on to the end”: Hashtag activism in Hong Kong protestsAditi Bhatia & Andrew S. Ross | pp. 117–142
- Metalinguistic tactics in the Hong Kong protest movementRodney H. Jones & Dennis Chau | pp. 143–172
- Anna Islentyeva. 2021. Corpus-Based Analysis of Ideological Bias: Migration in the British PressReviewed by Shizhou Xia | pp. 173–176
- Monica Boria, Ángeles Carreres, María Noriega-Sánchez & Marcus Tomalin (eds.). 2020. Translation and multimodality: Beyond wordsReviewed by Yao Wang & Hui Ding | pp. 177–181
- Helen Caple, Changpeng Huan & Monika Bednarek. 2020. Multimodal News Analysis across CulturesReviewed by Debing Feng | pp. 182–185
- Zeynep Gulsah Capan, Filipe dos Reis & Maj Grasten. 2021. The Politics of Translation in International RelationsReviewed by Kanglong Liu & Muhammad Afzaal | pp. 186–189
Introduction
Articles
Book reviews