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OverviewThis volume draws on issues and cases from more than 20 countries to provide empirical evidence and theoretical insights into why discourse matters. Covering a wide range of concepts and topical issues, contributors from media studies, journalism, and linguistics address the following key questions: Why and how does discourse matter pertaining to identity in a mediatized world? Who makes discourse and identity matter, for what reason, in what way, and with what consequences? The volume provokes a new proposition that it is necessary to go beyond the safe havens of disciplinary strongholds with familiar terminology, methodology, and questions to address future inquiries into discourse and identity from a combination of linguistics and journalistic media studies. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Yusuf Kalyango, Jr. , Monika Weronika KopytowskaPublisher: Peter Lang Publishing Inc Imprint: Peter Lang Publishing Inc Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 15.00cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.50cm Weight: 0.690kg ISBN: 9781433123900ISBN 10: 1433123908 Pages: 380 Publication Date: 31 July 2014 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsContents: Paul Chilton: Why Discourse Matters: Negotiating Identity in the Mediatized World – Monika Weronika Kopytowska/Yusuf Kalyango, Jr.: Introduction: Discourse, Identity, and the Public Sphere – Mei Li Lean/Maya Khemlani David: Media Discourse as a Double-Edged Sword in Ethnic Integration – Li Zeng/Zhiwen Xiao/Khalat Tahat: Terrorism and Middle East Identity on Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya Websites – Laura Filardo-Llamas/Elena González-Cascos Jiménez: Memory and Identity in the Public Sphere: Northern Irish Murals – Enakshi Roy: Identity, Discourse and Cultural Signifiers in Indian Game Shows – Monika Weronika Kopytowska: Pictures in Our Heads: Crisis, Conflict and Drama – Godwin Etse Sikanku/Margaret Ivy Amoakohene: Media Discourse of President Barack Obama in Sub-Saharan Africa – Yusuf Kalyango Jr./Jared Henderson: New York Times Rhetorical Discourse Framing of Two Gadhafian Protégés – Kate Azuka Omenugha: Reading Images: African Women in the British News – Bryan McLaughlin/Hemant Shah: Agent of Change or Compromise? Jesse Jackson’s 1988 Presidential Campaign – Jared Henderson/Yusuf Kalyango, Jr.: The Ideology of Sexuality in Media Discourse and Text – Ashley D. Furrow: Framing Discourse and the Collective Memory of College Athletics – Christopher Hutton: «Soft» and «Hard» Theories of Identity: Orientalism, Aryanism, and Race – Piotr Cap: Proximization, Threat Construction, and Symbolic Distancing in Political Discourse – Padmini Banerjee/Myna German: Religious-Ethnic Identities in Multicultural Societies: Identity in the Global Age – Majid Khosravi Nik: Critical Discourse Analysis, Power, and New Media Discourse – Bob Hodge: Discourse Analysis and the Challenge of Identities – Monika Weronika Kopytowska: Discourse Matters: Beyond Disciplinary Boundaries.ReviewsIt is heartening to come upon a volume for which the chapter authors not only represent multiple countries - but to as well have a preponderance of Africa-connected authors. Because I believe that the twenty-second century will be Africa's, I see this ambitious collection as startlingly prescient. The co-editors have brought together a wide-ranging group of writings in this impressive volume. (Anne Cooper-Chen, Professor Emerita, Ohio University) The editors are right to focus on the fact that identity is a major reason why discourse matters. What is certainly needed is for linguists, cultural analysts, sociologists, psychologists, and other scholars to provide detailed descriptions and to raise questions. The present book offers an extraordinarily diverse array of such studies. (From the Preface by Paul Chilton) Author InformationYusuf Kalyango, Jr. (PhD, University of Missouri) is Director of the Institute for International Journalism and Associate Professor of Journalism in the E. W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University. He is author of African Media and Democratization (Lang, 2011) and editor of the International Communication Research Journal (ICD-AEJMC), effective August 2014. Monika Weronika Kopytowska (PhD, University of Lodz, Poland) is Assistant Professor in the Department of Pragmatics at the University of Lodz. She is co-editor of Lodz Papers in Pragmatics and associate editor of CADAAD Journal. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |