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  1. Nailing down an answer: participations of power in trial talk.Gregory Matoesian - 2005 - Discourse Studies 7 (6):733-759.
    This article examines a questioning strategy in trial crossexamination designed to control an evasive witness, and how that control functions through the interactive contours of verbal and visual conduct to index identity, construct multidimensional forms of participation and project intertextual relations. In the process of nailing down an answer, attorney and witness manipulate linguistic ideologies and project participations of power to calibrate the epistemological criteria for determining the legitimacy of legal realities. I demonstrate how indexical iconicities of trial dialogic form (...)
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  • Reading the law: a critical introduction to legal method and techniques.Peter Goodrich - 1986 - New York, NY: Blackwell.
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  • Pascalian meditations.Pierre Bourdieu - 1997 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    Synthesizing forty years' work by France's leading sociologist, this book exemplifies Bourdieu's unique ability to link sociological theory, historical information, and philosophical thought. It makes explicit the presuppositions of a state of 'scholasticism', a certain leisure liberated from the urgencies of the world. Philosophers have brought these presuppositions into the order of discourse, more to legitimate than analyze them, and this is the primary systematic, epistemological, ethical, and aesthetic error that Bourdieu subjects to methodological critique. Pascalian because he, too, was (...)
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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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  • Critical linguistics and critical discourse analysis.Ruth Wodak - 2011 - In Jan-Ola Östman & Jef Verschueren (eds.), Handbook of Pragmatics: 22nd Annual Installment. John Benjamins. pp. 50--70.
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