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  1. ‘I am a very happy, lucky lady, and I am full of Vitality!’ Analysis of promotional strategies on the websites of probiotic yoghurt producers.Nelya Koteyko - 2009 - Critical Discourse Studies 6 (2):111-125.
    This article studies the Internet advertising of food and drinks containing probiotics – potentially beneficial bacteria marketed as a means to strengthen the body's ‘defence mechanisms’. Using the framework of critical genre analysis, I describe discursive and semiotic means by which probiotics emerge as a credible ‘tool’ for building the ‘inner armour’ of immunity and as a locus of interlinked discourses on biomedicine, science, nutrition and the body. In my analysis, I examine the multitude of strategies with the help of (...)
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  • Myth, language, and complex ideologies.Josué Antonio Nescolarde-Selva & Josep-Lluis Usó-Doménech - 2014 - Complexity 20 (2):63-81.
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  • Re-constructing Babel: Discourse analysis, hermeneutics and the Interpretive Arc.Allan Bell - 2011 - Discourse Studies 13 (5):519-568.
    This article questions the aptness of ‘discourse analysis’ as a label for our field, and prefers the less reductionist concept of ‘Discourse Interpretation’. It does this through drawing on ideas from the field of philosophical hermeneutics – the theory and practice of interpreting texts. It operationalizes and adapts the construct of the Interpretive Arc from the philosophy of Paul Ricoeur in order to address issues that are central to discourse work, including that of how we warrant the validity of our (...)
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  • The ideologies behind newspaper crime reports of Latinos and Wall Street/CEOs: a critical analysis of metonymy in text and image.Theresa Catalano & Linda R. Waugh - 2013 - Critical Discourse Studies 10 (4):406-426.
    This study illustrates how metonymy in image and text work together to produce dominant ideologies in US media discourse, through careful, multidisciplinary analysis of over 25 articles in online US newspapers from the years 2004 to 2011 that reported crimes committed by Wall Street/ceos and Latino migrants. Using critical discourse analysis/studies, multimodal analysis, and cognitive linguistic frameworks, we examine examples of metonymy, which combine to negatively ‘Other’ Latinos and produce positive representations of Wall Street/ceos. While work in critical metaphor analysis (...)
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  • The racialization of language in British political discourse.Adrian Blackledge - 2006 - Critical Discourse Studies 3 (1):61-79.
    In the summer of 2001 there were violent disturbances on the streets of towns and cities in the north of England. These disturbances, popularly described in the British media as ‘race riots’, principally involved young British Asian men, young White British men, and the police. In November 2002 the Nationality, Immigration, and Asylum Act was granted Royal Assent, and passed into British law, introducing legislation which required spouses of British citizens to demonstrate their proficiency in English when applying for British (...)
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  • Phil Graham and axiological discourse analysis: after neoliberalism.Allan Luke - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    This is an essay introduction to a special edition of Critical Discourse Studies on the work of Phil Graham. It is a critical overview and reappraisal of his major interdisciplinary contribution to the field: an axiological approach that focuses on meaning and values in a materialist political economy of language. The contributors to this volume enlist Graham's approach to trace the aftermaths and discontents of neoliberalism: nothing less than resurgent nationalisms, monoculturalism and autocracy, fuelled by social media and digital communications. (...)
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  • ‘Murderers of the unborn’ and ‘sexual degenerates’: analysis of the ‘anti-gender’ discourse of the Catholic Church and the nationalist right in Poland.Piotr Żuk & Paweł Żuk - 2019 - Tandf: Critical Discourse Studies 17 (5):566-588.
    Volume 17, Issue 5, November 2020, Page 566-588.
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  • Real men do wear mascara: advertising discourse and masculine identity.Claire Harrison - 2008 - Critical Discourse Studies 5 (1):55-74.
    During the past two decades, the traditional concept of masculinity has been challenged by the pervasive spread of metrosexual attitudes and practices through Western cultures. This article examines an extreme aspect of this trend through a multimodal reading of an online advertisement for male mascara. Using social semiotic theory and methodologies based on functional grammars, the analysis reveals that the advertisement's producers are treading a fine line in their verbal and visual discursive choices, trying to create a dialectic that encourages (...)
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  • Inequality as meritocracy: a critical discourse analysis of the metaphors of flexibility, diversity, and choice, and the value of truth in Singapore’s education policies, 1979 - 2012.Nadira Abu Talib - unknown
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  • Putting philosophy back to work in Critical Discourse Analysis.Nadira Talib & Richard Fitzgerald - 2018 - Critical Discourse Studies 15 (2):123-139.
    This paper explores how philosophical inquiry and Critical Discourse Analysis can mutually benefit from each other to produce new methodological and reflexive directions in neo-liberal policy research to examine the phenomenon of 'What is '. Through this we argue that augmenting linguistic analysis with philosophical perspectives develops and supports CDA scholarship more broadly by accommodating the shifting complexity of social problems of ideologically driven inequality that are inbuilt through, in our case, social policy texts. In discussing philosophical-methodological issues, the paper (...)
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  • Common sense as extremism: the multi-semiotics of contemporary national socialism.Gustav Westberg & Henning Årman - 2019 - Critical Discourse Studies 16 (5):549-568.
    This paper explores how national socialist aesthetics and semiotics are regimented within the Swedish Nazi milieu today. In order to treat fascism as contemporary ideology, the article applies intertextuality and provenance as analytical concepts in the analysis of how Nazism is re-emerging discursively. The analysis contributes unique insights, as the dataset consists of extremist discourse aimed at providing members of the most prominent Swedish Nazi movement with guidance on how to embody and express national socialism in their everyday lives. The (...)
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  • Floods, waves, and surges: the representation of Latin@ immigrant children in the United States mainstream media.Megan Strom & Emily Alcock - 2017 - Critical Discourse Studies 14 (4):440-457.
    ABSTRACTDuring the 2014 fiscal year, the United States saw a dramatic increase in Latin@ child immigration in hopes of parent–child reunification. The United States mainstream media reacted by reporting heavily on the child arrivals during the summer of 2014. The current study follows a Critical Discourse Studies approach to unveil the ideologies communicated through this media coverage by analyzing the lexical and grammatical representation of Latin@ immigrant children in two of the most read newspapers nationwide: The New York Times and (...)
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  • Food insecurity and participation: A critical discourse analysis.Irena Knezevic, Heather Hunter, Cynthia Watt, Patricia Williams & Barbara Anderson - 2014 - Critical Discourse Studies 11 (2):230-245.
    The Nova Scotia Participatory Food Costing Project uses participatory action research to collect data on the cost and affordability of food and involves those who are directly affected by food insecurity. More than a decade of this work has also yielded qualitative evaluation data that illustrates the project participants' experience with the project and with food security more generally. The data are characterized by ample evidence of participants' perceived powerlessness related to government and social structures. At the same time, that (...)
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