Affiliation:
1. University of Lodz, Poland
Abstract
Follow-ups have been routinely considered a dialogic/conversational phenomenon. In this article, I demonstrate that the concept of follow-up could be extended to cover monologic discourses as well, especially those in which the speaker realizes a macro-goal over a number of texts produced in different contextual conditions. These dynamically evolving conditions make the speaker – as happens in dialogue – continually update and redefine his or her rhetorical choices to maintain realization of the macro-goal intact. Such an approach subsumes a ‘dialogic’ relation between the speaker and the shifting discourse context – rather than between the speaker and his or her specific interlocutor – and views follow-up as an instance of rhetoric that has been forcibly modified from the previous/initial instance, to keep enacting the speaker’s macro-goal against requirements of the new context. As an illustration, I show how monologic follow-ups work in George W. Bush’s War-on-Terror discourse. In particular, I discuss how the macro-goal of Bush’s 2003–2004 rhetoric of the Iraq War (legitimization of the pre-emptive military strike and the later US involvement) has been maintained in the ‘follow-up speeches’ responding to loss of the initial legitimization premise, that is, the alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction by the Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,Language and Linguistics,Communication
Cited by
6 articles.
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