Affiliation:
1. University of the West of England
Abstract
Abstract
Employing Wodak’s discourse-historical approach, this paper examines how Ghana’s independence leader – Kwame
Nkrumah – in his creation of the Unite or Perish myth constructed ‘the African people’ in a manner in sync with populist
performance. It argues that Nkrumah’s discourse, in its focus on the formation of a Union Government of Africa as the only means
of Africa’s peace, progress, security and survival in the post-independence era, can be characterized as a form of populist
rhetoric that presupposes an antagonistic relationship between two homogeneous social groups. To this end, the paper analyzes
three discursive strategies utilized by Nkrumah in promoting anti-establishment sentiments while celebrating or valorizing ‘the
ordinary people’: nomination and predication of social actors and actions, the construction of a man of the people image and the
exploitation of familiarity and historical memory. It concludes with a discussion on the implications of the study for political
discourse analysis in terms of the interrelationship between political myth and populist performance.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
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