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  1. The rhetoric of collocational, intertextual and institutional pluralization in Obama's Cairo speech: a discourse-analytical approach.Amir H. Y. Salama - 2012 - Critical Discourse Studies 9 (3):211-229.
    This article proposes a novel discourse-analytical approach that explores Obama's rhetoric of pluralization in his Cairo speech on 4 June 2004. The approach eclectically combines both quantitative corpus and qualitative discourse-analysis methods. Three aspects of analysis are at play. First is the collocational aspect capturing the lexico-grammatical meanings associated with the political and social actors nominated, referenced and predicated in the speech. Second is the intertextual aspect that reflects the political-religious meanings underlying the speech. Third is the institutional aspect related (...)
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  • The Red Gold: analysing a nexus of practices.Inger Lassen - 2008 - Critical Discourse Studies 5 (1):1-19.
    The case study discussed in this article focuses on two communicative events unfolding in connection with trials in Angola of a genetically modified plant designed to detect landmines. The case is based on an independent observer's report and a documentary, The Red Gold, which was broadcast on Danish TV during 2004. I use a nexus analysis approach combined with critical discourse analysis to suggest that intertextuality and discourse interaction across genres influence ideological representations. This point is brought to the fore (...)
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  • Constructing the multilingual child: the case of language education policy in Norway.Jarmila Bubikova-Moan - 2017 - Critical Discourse Studies 14 (1):56-72.
    ABSTRACTThe aim of this paper is to trace how the multilingual child has been variably constructed in Norway’s language education policy discourse over time. This will be explored through an in-depth critical discourse analytical reading of two official policy reports targeting specifically the situation of children of non-Norwegian ethnolinguistic heritage in Norway’s educational system. The key analytical concept is intertextuality, connecting the various discursive layers of Norway’s language education policy processes, each replete with a multitude of voices with a stake (...)
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  • ‘Challenge’ or ‘collaboration’ social interaction and recontextualization: McDonald's CSR report.Joanne Jung-Wook Hong - 2012 - Critical Discourse Studies 9 (2):149-162.
    This paper is concerned with analyzing McDonald's language use in its response to two different social issues: one regarding employees and the other regarding the environment. It discusses and compares these two different social interactions in terms of discourse formations – [MCJOB] and [DEFORESTATION] – based on McAndrew's [2001. Intertextuality, heteroglossia and systemic functional linguistics: A framework for analyzing ideology ; 2004. Towards a framework for analyzing ideology: Applying intertextuality, heteroglossia and systemic functional linguistics. In M. Putz, J. Aerselaer & (...)
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  • The multimodal construction of the identity of politicians: Constructing Jacob zuma through prior texts, prior discourses and multiple modes.Marcelyn Oostendorp - 2015 - Critical Discourse Studies 12 (1):39-56.
    This paper will use the theoretical concepts of ‘intertextuality’, ‘interdiscursivity’ and ‘resemiotization’ to analyse four media texts on South African president, Jacob Zuma. The aims of the paper are, first, to analyse the role that intertextual references play in the construction of the identity of public figures. Second, the paper investigates the semiotic affordances of the visual and linguistic mode by tracing how previous discourses and texts about Jacob Zuma move across discursive spaces and modes. The findings suggest that reference (...)
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