Article published In: Pragmatics and Society
Vol. 10:2 (2019) ► pp.230–250
Time tells a story
Temporality as a marker of ideology in the Palestinian political discourse
Published online: 5 July 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/ps.16005.abu
https://doi.org/10.1075/ps.16005.abu
Abstract
This study provides a synthesized perspective on the functions
and ideological orientation of time adverbials as (re)situated in their
socio-political contexts in five speeches by the Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas at the UN. By analysing adverbials of truncated, extending, and fixed time
references, the study reveals some systematic ideological formulations of
conflict and resolution in the Palestinian political discourse. Adverbials of
truncated and extending time are incongruous and generate a sense of
interpretive dissonance. The truncated sense is embedded and more particular,
thus counteracting the extending time which is established as more progressive,
perseverant and consistent. This represents power asymmetries and different
ideological orientations to conflict and resolution. Adverbials of fixed time,
however, are transformative; they grant an end to a clash of ideologies due to
the conflict between truncated and extending temporalities, and therefore
resurrect a discourse that is based on equity and justice.
Keywords: temporality, adverbials, political discourse, language function, ideology, power
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 1.1Palestine between time and atemporality
- 1.2On time
- 1.3On deictics
- 1.4On ideology
- 2.Temporality expressed through adverbials in the Palestinian political
discourse
- 2.1[laħðˤah]: The truncated sense
- 2.2[mə zælə]: The extending sense
- 2.3[?al?æn]: The fixed sense
- 3.Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
References Links
References (55)
Abuarrah, Sufyan. 2016. “Now’: a marker to a different mental representation and
proximization of threat”. Acta Linguistica Hafniensia: International Journal of
Linguistics 42(2): 195–218.
Aggestam, Karin & Annika Björkdahl. 2011. “Just peace postponed: Unending peace process and frozen
conflicts”. JAD-PbP Working Paper 10. Retrieved from [URL]
Androutsopoulos, Iannis. 2002. Natural language processing: Exploring time, tense and aspect in natural
language database interfaces. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Badarin, Emile. 2016. Palestinian Political Discourse: Between Exile and Occupation. London: Routledge.
Bazzi, Samia. 2009. Arab News and Conflict: A Multidisciplinary Discourse Study. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Benovsky, Jiri. 2010. “The Relationist and Substantivalist Theories of Time: Foes or
Friends?” European Journal of Philosophy 19(4): 491–506.
Bühler, Karl. 1982. “
The Deictic Field of Language and Deictic Words
”. In: Speech, Place and Action: Studies in Deixis and Related Topics, ed. by Robert Jarvella and Wolfgang Klein, 9–30. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
Chilton, Paul & Christina Schäffner. 2002. Introduction: Themes and Principles in the Analysis of Political
Discourse. In Politics as Text and Talk: Analytic approaches to political
discourse, eds. by Paul Chilton & Christina Schäffner, 1–45. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Evans, Vyvyan. 2005. The Structure of Time: Language, Meaning and Temporal Cognition. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Fairclough, Norman & Ruth Wodak. 1997. Critical Discourse Analysis. In: Discourse as Social Interaction, ed. by Teun van Dijk, 258–284. London: Sage.
Fillmore, Charles. 1971. “Towards a Theory of Deixis”. Working Papers on Linguistics, University of Hawaii.
Fricke, Ellen. 2002. “Origo, Pointing and Speech: The Impact of co-speech gestures on
linguistic Deixis Theory”. Gesture 2(2): 207–226.
Grzymala-Busse, Anna. 2011. “Time Will Tell? Temporality and the Analysis of Causal Mechanisms
and Processes”. Comparative Political Studies 44(9): 1267–1297.
Hansen, Maj-Britt Mosegaard. 2008. Particles at the Semantics/Pragmatics Interface: Synchronic and
Diachronic Issues: A Study with Special Reference for the French Phrasal
Adverbs. The University of Manchester.
Hill, Tom. 2008. “After Oslo: Truth and Reconciliation in the Palestinian
Discourse”. Mediterranean Politics 13(2): 110–127.
Horn, Laurence. 1970. “Aint it Hard Anymore”. In: Papers from the Sixth regional meeting of the Chicago Linguistics
Society, ed. by M. A. Campbell et al., 318–328, Chicago: Chicago Linguistics Society.
Hyatt, David. 2005. “Time for a Change: A Critical Discoursal Analysis of Synchronic
Context with Diachronic Relevance”. Discourse and Society 16(4): 515–534.
Jamal, Amal. 2016. “Conflict Theory, Temporality, and Transformative Temporariness:
Lessons from Israel and Palestine”. Constellations: An International Journal of Critical and Democratic
Theory 23(3): 365–377.
Kimmerle, Heinz. 1996. “How to repeat what never has been?” In Time and Temporality in Intercultural Perspective, ed. by Douwe Tiemersma & Henk Oosterling, 1–11. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
Klein, Wolfgang. 2009. How Time is Encoded. In The Expression of Time, eds. by Wolfgang Klein & Ping Li, 39–83. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
2006. Deixis. In The Handbook of Pragmatics, eds. by Laurence Horn & Gregory Ward, 97–122. Oxford: Blackwell.
Machover, Moshé. 2012. Israelis and Palestinians: Conflict and Resolution. Chicago: Haymarket Books.
Mall, Ram Adhar. 1996. Time Arrow Within the Bounds of Cyclic Time. In Time and Temporality in Intercultural Perspective, eds. by. Douwe Tiemersma & Henk Oosterling, 65–75. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
McDowell, Sara, & Maire Braniff. 2014. Commemoration as Conflict: Space, Memory and Identity in Peace
Processes. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
McMahon, Sean. 2016. “Temporality, Peace Initiatives and Palestinian-Israeli
Politics”. Middle East Critique 251: 1–7.
Michaelis, Laura. 1993. “Continuity within Three Scalar Models: The Polysemy of Adverbial
still
”. Journal of Semantics 101: 193–237.
Piwek, Paul, Robbert-Jan Beun & Anita Cremers. 2008. “Proximal’ and ‘Distal’ in Language and Cognition: Evidence from
Deictic Demonstratives in Dutch”. Journal of Pragmatics 40(4): 694–718.
Rauh, Gisa. 1983. Aspects of Deixis. In Essays on Deixis, ed. by Gisa Rauh, 9–61. Tübingen: Gunter Narr.
Suleiman, Ramzi. 2002. On Marginal People: The Case of the Palestinians in
Israel. In Psychoanalysis, Identity and Ideology: Critical essays on the
Israeli/Palestinian Case, eds. by John Bunzl & Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi, 71–83. New York: Springer Science and Business Media.
van Dijk, Teun. 1984. Prejudice in Discourse: An analysis of ethnic prejudice in cognition and
conversation. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
. 1995a. Discourse Analysis as Ideology Analysis. In Language and Peace, ed. by Anita Wenden and Christina Schäffner, 17–33. Aldershot: Dartmouth Publishing.
Whitrow, Gerald J. 1972. What is Time? The Classic Account of the Nature of Time. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
The speeches were retrieved from the following websites:
1.
Abbas, Mahmoud, UN, 23 September, 2011
2.
Abbas, Mahmoud, UN, 29 January 2012
3.
Abbas, Mahmoud, UN, 27 September 2012
4.
Abbas, Mahmoud, UN, 26 September 2014
5.
Abbas, Mahmoud, UN, 30 September 2015
6.
Abbas, Mahmoud, UN, 22 September 2016
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Ma, Qian & Qiufang Wen
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 30 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
