Abstract
Abstract
The idea that manipulation relies more heavily on implicit than
on explicit communication has been the plank of several earlier and recent
debates on argumentation and speaker roles in interactions. The present
contribution will inquire into the selective nature of the use
of implicit communication in political discourse; notably, analyzing the
distribution of presuppositions and implicatures in two political debates, it
will be argued that the use of these two implicit communicative devices – and,
particularly, that of presupposition – is likely to correlate
with the expression of disagreement, notably through aggressive and blasting
contents, more often than with other content types. This tendency will be
accounted for by considering the evidential meaning presuppositions and
implicatures add to an utterance, which contributes to modulating both speaker’s
commitment to truth and source identification on the part of the receiver. Data
also show that, when face-threatening contents are exchanged, presuppositions
epitomize by far the most preferred strategy in both debates.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
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