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  1. Picking the right cherries? A comparison of corpus-based and qualitative analyses of news articles about masculinity.Erez Levon & Paul Baker - 2015 - Discourse and Communication 9 (2):221-236.
    As a way of comparing qualitative and quantitative approaches to critical discourse analysis, two analysts independently examined similar datasets of newspaper articles in order to address the research question ‘How are different types of men represented in the British press?’. One analyst used a 41.5 million word corpus of articles, while the other focused on a down-sampled set of 51 articles from the same corpus. The two ensuing research reports were then critically compared in order to elicit shared and unique (...)
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  • Book review: David Machin and Andrea Mayr, How to Do Critical Discourse Analysis: A Multimodal Introduction. [REVIEW] Wu-Peng - 2014 - Discourse and Communication 8 (2):233-236.
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  • ‘Committed to the ideals of 1916’. The language of paramilitary groups: the case of the Irish Republican Army.Laura Filardo-Llamas - 2013 - Critical Discourse Studies 10 (1):1-17.
    The objective of this article is to describe and understand the language of paramilitary groups in the Northern Irish context, taking statements issued by the Irish Republican Army as an example. In order to do so, we depart from a broad understanding of political discourse. So as to understand how beliefs, actions and the IRA existence are legitimised in those statements, Text-World Theory is combined with critical discourse analysis approaches. Chilton's notion of ‘discourse worlds’ is considered the main legitimising strategy, (...)
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  • Unfinished Artefacts: The Case of Northern Irish Murals.Stefan Solleder - 2016 - Continent 5 (1).
    Stefan Solleder reconstructs topologies of conflict-ridden Northern Ireland via an alternative excavation program, where street views and walls attest to layers of marked territories and framed identities.
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