Understanding Political Persuasion: Linguistic and Rhetorical Analysis

Author:   Douglas Mark Ponton
Publisher:   Vernon Press
ISBN:  

9781622739325


Pages:   242
Publication Date:   11 March 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Understanding Political Persuasion: Linguistic and Rhetorical Analysis


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Author:   Douglas Mark Ponton
Publisher:   Vernon Press
Imprint:   Vernon Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.327kg
ISBN:  

9781622739325


ISBN 10:   1622739329
Pages:   242
Publication Date:   11 March 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Dr. Ponton's concise book provides a valuable introduction to a broad landscape of political discourse analysis. Especially for newcomers to this complex and sprawling field of inquiry, Ponton's book will provide a useful synthesis of existing scholarship along with his own cogent case studies. Beginning with a comparative look at the 18th and 21st centuries, his book argues that crucial elements of political rhetoric such as alliteration, litotes, and metaphor, which Ponton locates in Edmund Burke's great speeches of the 18th century, have been under-appreciated in contemporary scholarship. Ponton then examines argumentative strategies in the 19th century, centered on Disraeli's speech about the Suez canal, and proceeds to the 20th century with a look at Churchill's use of mass media to amplify his appeal. Chapter five then moves to an American context to contend with the ways that community is imagined in the speeches of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. The postwar period receives further treatment in chapters six and seven, where IRA leader Gerry Adams, the US Republican Party, and UKIP's Nigel Farage are explored (Ponton's analysis of Farage's speech in particularly revealing). The book concludes with a thorough bibliography that will be quite useful to readers. In sum, Dr. Ponton has provided a clear and original path through the world of rhetorical analysis, and students will have no trouble following his examples and analysis. No doubt, the author is very well versed in the relevant literature and has a clear manner of explicating the key issues under consideration--something whose real world importance (e.g., the way that politicians are able to mobilize voters in the contemporary world) cannot be underestimated. Randolph Lewis Professor, American Studies Dept, University of Texas at Austin Building on established theoretical perspectives on political discourse, this book insightfully applies such theories to a sweep of historical/social contexts and political actors as diverse as Disraeli, Malcom X, Churchill and Farage. One of the strengths of this book is the author's ability to deliver sound and thorough analysis and yet to make for an accessible and engaging reading that will appeal to students of linguistics and academics alike. Ponton skilfully draws from the linguistic toolbox - from Aristotle to multimodality - to deconstruct a number of political speeches, convincingly demonstrating the usefulness of analysing metaphors, stance, framing, modal verbs and other rhetorical devices and, ultimately, pointing to the importance of persuasive language in political discourse. This critical exercise could not be timelier. Dr. Franco Zappettini University of Liverpool An engaging and accessible volume, Understanding Political Persuasion seeks to provide a comprehensive overview of the rhetorical and argumentative strategies deployed by politicians in their speeches, with the aim of showing how such strategies can play an essential part in political success. Bringing together a range of illustrative examples of famous speeches, delivered by a variety of British and American politicians over the last two and a half centuries, the book explores them in the light of current theoretical principles and research findings. Thus, it analyses the rhetorical and argumentative strategies in terms of concepts such as evaluation, engagement and alignment, as well as focusing on linguistic features like deontic modality and the use of visual and verbal metaphors. It makes a useful contribution to the existing body of research on this fascinating topic and is likely to prove a valid resource for all those interested in learning more about how politicians use and deploy language. Prof. Dr. Martin Solly University of Turin, Italy


Dr. Ponton's concise book provides a valuable introduction to a broad landscape of political discourse analysis. Especially for newcomers to this complex and sprawling field of inquiry, Ponton's book will provide a useful synthesis of existing scholarship along with his own cogent case studies. Beginning with a comparative look at the 18th and 21st centuries, his book argues that crucial elements of political rhetoric such as alliteration, litotes, and metaphor, which Ponton locates in Edmund Burke's great speeches of the 18th century, have been under-appreciated in contemporary scholarship. Ponton then examines argumentative strategies in the 19th century, centered on Disraeli's speech about the Suez canal, and proceeds to the 20th century with a look at Churchill's use of mass media to amplify his appeal. Chapter five then moves to an American context to contend with the ways that community is imagined in the speeches of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. The postwar period receives further treatment in chapters six and seven, where IRA leader Gerry Adams, the US Republican Party, and UKIP's Nigel Farage are explored (Ponton's analysis of Farage's speech in particularly revealing). The book concludes with a thorough bibliography that will be quite useful to readers. In sum, Dr. Ponton has provided a clear and original path through the world of rhetorical analysis, and students will have no trouble following his examples and analysis. No doubt, the author is very well versed in the relevant literature and has a clear manner of explicating the key issues under consideration--something whose real world importance (e.g., the way that politicians are able to mobilize voters in the contemporary world) cannot be underestimated. Randolph Lewis Professor, American Studies Dept, University of Texas at Austin Building on established theoretical perspectives on political discourse, this book insightfully applies such theories to a sweep of historical/social contexts and political actors as diverse as Disraeli, Malcom X, Churchill and Farage. One of the strengths of this book is the author's ability to deliver sound and thorough analysis and yet to make for an accessible and engaging reading that will appeal to students of linguistics and academics alike. Ponton skilfully draws from the linguistic toolbox - from Aristotle to multimodality - to deconstruct a number of political speeches, convincingly demonstrating the usefulness of analysing metaphors, stance, framing, modal verbs and other rhetorical devices and, ultimately, pointing to the importance of persuasive language in political discourse. This critical exercise could not be timelier. Dr. Franco Zappettini University of Liverpool An engaging and accessible volume, Understanding Political Persuasion seeks to provide a comprehensive overview of the rhetorical and argumentative strategies deployed by politicians in their speeches, with the aim of showing how such strategies can play an essential part in political success. Bringing together a range of illustrative examples of famous speeches, delivered by a variety of British and American politicians over the last two and a half centuries, the book explores them in the light of current theoretical principles and research findings. Thus, it analyses the rhetorical and argumentative strategies in terms of concepts such as evaluation, engagement and alignment, as well as focusing on linguistic features like deontic modality and the use of visual and verbal metaphors. It makes a useful contribution to the existing body of research on this fascinating topic and is likely to prove a valid resource for all those interested in learning more about how politicians use and deploy language. Prof. Dr. Martin Solly University of Turin, Italy


Author Information

Douglas Mark Ponton is Associate Professor of English Language and Translation at the Department of Political and Social Sciences, University of Catania. His research interests include political discourse analysis, ecolinguistics, interactive sociolinguistics, applied linguistics, pragmatics, corpus linguistics and critical discourse studies. His main publications are For Arguments' Sake: Speaker Evaluation in Modern Political Discourse and Meaning Politics: a Manual of Political Discourse Analysis. As well as politics, his research deals with a variety of social topics, including tourism (he has published on the Montalbano effect and cruise tourism), the discourse of mediation; ecology, local dialect and folk traditions, including proverbs and Blues music. He published a paper on the figure of the bandit in popular song, exploring the lyrics of Bob Dylan and Woody Guthrie. Douglas Ponton is also a keen amateur musician.

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