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Follow-ups in political discourse : explorations across contexts and discourse domains /

This contribution outlines two theoretical frameworks - behaviorist and reflexive- for considering the discursive interaction between states and internationalorganizations within treaty monitoring (a process of assessing states' compliancewith international treaties). Monitoring is seen as a co...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Weizman, Elda (Editor ), Fetzer, Anita, 1958- (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2015]
Colección:Discourse Approaches in Politics, Society and Culture, 60
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Follow-ups in Political Discourse; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; In memoriam; Table of contents; Following up across contexts and discourse domains; 1. Introductory comments; 2. Follow-ups; 3. The contributions; References; Part I. Follow-ups in the traditional media; Intertextual references in Austrian parliamentary debates: Between evaluation and argumentation; 1. Uptake and follow-up: Towards a functional definition of reactive contributions in parliamentary; 2. Two kinds of and two perspectives on political discourse.
  • 3. Political and institutional context of the investigated parliamentary debates4. Categories of analysis; 4.1 Sources of follow-ups; 4.2 Forms of follow-ups
  • quoting and mentioning prior utterance; 4.3 Rhetorical and argumentative functions of follow-ups; 5. Results; 5.1 Quantitative results; 5.2 Qualitative results; 6. Conclusions and discussion; References; Appendix 1; "I have nothing to do but agree": Affiliative meta-discursive follow-ups as a resource for the reciprocal positioning of journalists, experts and politicians-as-experts in television news; 1. Introduction.
  • 2. Journalists and experts on the news2.1 The ambiguities of journalists' positioning; 2.2 The ambiguities of experts' positioning; 3. The present study; 4. Follow-ups as a reciprocal positioning device; 4.1 The construction of mutual alignment through the use of follow-ups; 4.2 The expert interview's affordances for politicians; 5. Conclusions; References; Part II. Follow-ups in the new media; Bravo for this editorial! Users' comments in discussion forums; 1. Introduction; 2. Opinion genres: Editorial and comment section; 2.1 Editorial; 2.2 Comment sections as participatory journalism.
  • 2.3 Discussion forums as written interaction3. Follow-ups; 3.1 Definition of follow-ups; 3.2 Commenting, stancetaking and positioning in follow-ups; 4. Data and method; 5. Taking a stance and positioning; 5.1 Evaluations and positioning in agreeing and disagreeing; 5.2 Disagreement through affective, ironic, and epistemic stances; 6. Posts as follow-ups; 6.1 Disagreeing with the content of the editorial; 6.2 Against the positioning of the editors and the newspaper; 6.3 Agreeing with the editorial; 7. Conclusion; References; Appendix 1.
  • Metacommunicative follow-ups in British, German and Russian political webchats1. Introduction; 2. Data; 3. Definition of follow-ups in political webchats; 4. Types of follow-ups in webchats; 5. Discursive functions of follow-ups in online webchats with politicians; 6. Conclusion: Genre and cross-cultural peculiarities of follow-ups in online political discussions; References; Part III. Follow-ups across speech events ; Framing the Queen's head scarf: A case study on follow-ups in Dutch politics; 1. Introduction; 2. Follow-ups in political communication.