
Journal of Language and Politics
Volume 24, Issue 2 (2025)
2025. iv, 187 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 14 February 2025
Published online on 14 February 2025
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
Table of Contents
- From Barack Obama to Donald Trump: The evolution of moral appeals in national conventionsJennifer Lin | pp. 177–213
- The utility of (political) dogwhistles – a life cycle perspectiveAsad Sayeed, Ellen Breitholtz, Robin Cooper, Elina Lindgren, Gregor Rettenegger & Björn Rönnerstrand | pp. 214–234
- Interests convergence in global human rights politics: Text analysis of Universal Periodic review of the UN human rights councilYooneui Kim | pp. 235–258
- The awkward rhetoric of Spanish liberalism: The politics of language of the Citizens partyJosé María Rosales | pp. 259–279
- From “them” to “us”? The changing representation of China in the South China Morning Post 20 years onMandy Hoi Man Yu & Dezheng (William) Feng | pp. 280–300
- Reactions to interruptions in Finnish, French and German parliamentary debatesJohanna Isosävi, Heike Baldauf-Quilliatre, Christophe Gagne & Eero Voutilainen | pp. 301–327
- “The youths are wiser now”: A positive discourse analysis of resistance in Nigeria’s 2023 electoral rhetoricChioma Juliet Ikechukwu-Ibe & Sopuruchi Christian Aboh | pp. 328–347
- Yannis Stavrakakis. 2024. Populist Discourse: Recasting Populism ResearchReviewed by Andrea McDonnell | pp. 348–351
- Tamsin Parnell. 2024. Constructing Brexit Britain: A Corpus-Assisted Approach to National Identity DiscourseReviewed by Mike Bolt | pp. 352–355
- Le Cheng & David Machin. 2023. The law and critical discourse studiesReviewed by Zhonghua Wu | pp. 356–359
- Philip Seargeant. 2024. The future of language: How technology, politics and utopianism are transforming the way we communicateReviewed by Jun-Jie Ma | pp. 360–363
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