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  1. (1 other version)Autonomy and Dignity: A Discussion on Contingency and Dominance.Leen Van Brussel - 2014 - Health Care Analysis 22 (2):1-18.
    With dying increasingly becoming a medicalised experience in old age, we are witnessing a shift from concern over death itself to an interest in dying ‘well’. Fierce discussions about end-of-life decision making and the permissibility of medical intervention in dying, discursively structured around the notion of a ‘good’ death, are evidence of this shift. This article focuses on ‘autonomy’ and ‘dignity’ as key signifiers in these discussions. Rather than being fully fixed and stable, both signifiers are contingent and carry a (...)
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  • Affective intensities of polarization: the making of the Islamist/secularist divide through articulations of news media in Turkey.Haktan Ural - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (6):700-716.
    The instrumentalization of news media resulting in advocacy reporting and the heavy use of commentary is a quintessential characteristic of mediascapes deeply informed by press-party parallelism, m...
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  • ‘Good’ and ‘bad’ deaths: Narratives and professional identities in interviews with hospice managers.Veronika Koller, Zsófia Demjén & Elena Semino - 2014 - Discourse Studies 16 (5):667-685.
    This article explores the formal and functional characteristics of narratives of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ deaths as they were told by 13 UK-based hospice managers in the course of semi-structured interviews. The interviewees’ responses include a variety of remarkably consistent ‘narratives of successful/frustrated intervention’, which exhibit distinctive formal characteristics in terms of the starting point and core of the action, the choice of personal pronouns and metaphors, and the ways in which positive and negative evaluation is expressed. In functional terms, the (...)
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  • (1 other version)Le ton d'évidence en éthique relève-t-il de la violence verbale? Analyse des mémoires envoyés à la Commission parlementaire québécoise sur la question de mourir dans la dignité.Daniel Burnier - 2019 - Canadian Journal of Bioethics/Revue canadienne de bioéthique 2 (2):42-50.
    This interdisciplinary article analyses how citizens debate in an organized public consultation on a deeply conflictual ethical issue: euthanasia. The case in question concerns the Quebec public consultation organized in 2010-2011 by the Special Commission on the Question of Dying with Dignity. The citizen voices debating publicly on euthanasia have so far attracted little attention from researchers. Using Aristotelian rhetorical tools, I analyzed the written submissions sent by citizens to the Special Commission. With very few exceptions, all those politically involved (...)
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  • (1 other version)Autonomy and Dignity: A Discussion on Contingency and Dominance.Leen Van Brussel - 2012 - Health Care Analysis 22 (2):174-191.
    With dying increasingly becoming a medicalised experience in old age, we are witnessing a shift from concern over death itself to an interest in dying ‘well’. Fierce discussions about end-of-life decision making and the permissibility of medical intervention in dying, discursively structured around the notion of a ‘good’ death, are evidence of this shift. This article focuses on ‘autonomy’ and ‘dignity’ as key signifiers in these discussions. Rather than being fully fixed and stable, both signifiers are contingent and carry a (...)
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