Affiliation:
1. University of York
2. University of Augsburg
3. Dalian University of Foreign Languages
4. Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Abstract
Abstract
Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) in the UK House of Commons is a ritual event, governed by a cluster of conventions.
Members of Parliament (MPs) must address their remarks to the Prime Minister (PM) through the medium of the Speaker of the House, who is
responsible for maintaining order during debates, and determining which MP may speak next. Due to the sacred role of the Speaker and the
prevalence of conventionalised conflict avoidance between the PM and those who ask challenging questions, PMQs resembles archaic tribal
councils, in which rights and obligations prevail. Yet, the importance of conventionalised indirectness and the sacred role of the Speaker
do not correlate with a lack of face-threats and challenges. PMQs represents an aggressive ritual setting in which the ritual roles and
rules only offer a façade to package aggression, and indeed may operate as interactional resources whereby participants can even increase
the efficiency of their verbal attacks. Thus, PMQs embodies a scene that ritual experts define as ‘anti-structural’ in character: in this
setting, the normative expectation in daily life to avoid conflict is temporarily suspended, to such an extent that conflict has become the
ritual norm and is regarded as quintessential to this parliamentary institution.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Philosophy,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
35 articles.
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