A critical note on the evolution of social theoretical and linguistic underpinnings of contemporary discourse studies
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Published:2019-12-11
Issue:2
Volume:20
Page:325-352
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ISSN:1848-9001
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Container-title:Jezikoslovlje
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language:
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Short-container-title:Jezikoslovlje (Online)
Abstract
This paper gives a
critical overview of analytical approaches dominating the field of discourse
studies in the last three decades, from the perspective of their
philosophical and formative bases: social constructionism and linguistics. It
explores different conceptions of the theoretical nexus between these two
bases leading to the emergence of three distinct yet complementary strands of
thought (i–iii). The paper starts with poststructuralist views of discourse
salient in (i) Laclau and Mouffe’s Discourse Theory. Laclau and Mouffe’s
assumption that no discourse is a closed entity but rather transformed
through contact with other discourses is taken as the introductory premise to
present a large family of (ii) critical discourse studies, characterized as
text-analytical practices explaining how discourse partakes in the production
and negotiations of ideological meanings. Finally, the paper discusses (iii)
three recent discourse analytical models: Discourse Space Theory, Critical
Metaphor Analysis, and Legitimization-Proximization Model. These new theories
make a further (and thus far final) step toward consolidation of the
social-theoretical and linguistic bases in contemporary discourse studies.
The empirical benefits of this consolidation are discussed in the last part
of the paper, which includes a case study where the new models are used in
the analysis of Polish anti-immigration discourse.
Publisher
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Osijek
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics