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Index
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Series editor’s preface
Acknowledgements
General introduction
1 Discourse, analysis, critique
2 What is CDA, and what is not CDA
3 CDA and neo-liberal capitalism
4 Manifesto for CDA in a time of crisis
Section A: Language, ideology and power
Introduction
1. Critical and descriptive goals in discourse analysis
Abstract
1 Introduction: orderliness and naturalisation
2 Social institutions and critical analysis
3 Critical and descriptive goals
3.1 Background knowledge
3.2 Goals
3.3 Power and status
3.4 Conclusion: research objectives
4 Concluding remarks: resistance
2. Language and ideology
1 Introduction
2 Location of ideology
3 Discourse and text
4 Hegemony
5 Limits of ideology
Acknowledgements
3. Semiosis, ideology and mediation. A dialectical view
1 Two examples
2 Mediation and ideology
3 Critical discourse analysis
4 Mediation and ideology
5 The Romanian cases
Section B: Discourse and sociocultural change
Introduction
4. Critical discourse analysis and the marketisation of public discourse: the universities
1 Towards a social theory of discourse
2 Analytical framework
3 Language and discourse in late capitalist society
4 Marketisation of public discourse: the universities
5 Conclusion
5. Discourse, change and hegemony
Abstract
1 Discourse and hegemony
2 A critical approach to discourse analysis
3 Technologisation of discourse
4 Conclusion
6. Ideology and identity change in political television
1 Introduction
2 Ambivalence
3 Disfluency
4 Mediatised political discourse: a new hegemony?
Section C: Dialectics of discourse: theoretical developments
Introduction
7. Discourse, social theory, and social research: the discourse of welfare reform
1 Sociolinguistic theory
2 The place of social linguistics in social research on modernity
3 New Labour
4 Texts and social practices
4.1 Social practices
4.2 Texts – the dialectics of discourse
4.3 Genres, styles and discourses
4.4 Field, order of discourse, intertextuality
4.5 Structure and action
4.6 New Labour, government and text
5 New Labour welfare ‘reform’: the textual moment
5.1 ‘Reform’ of social welfare
5.2 Generic chaining
5.3 Recontextualisation
5.4 Genre and framing
5.5 Discourse and classification
5.6 Equivalence and difference
6 Conclusion
8. Critical realism and semiosis (with Bob Jessop and Andrew Sayer)
1 Why critical realism must address semiosis
2 The social preconditions and context of semiosis
3 The role of semiosis in social structuration
4 Semiotic formations and their emergent properties: from abstract to concrete
5 Conclusions
Section D: Methodology in CDA research
Introduction
9. A dialectical–relational approach to critical discourse analysis in social research
1 Theory and concepts
2 Methodology
3 An example: political discourse analysis
4 An illustration: analysing political texts
5 Discussion
10. Understanding the new management ideology. A transdisciplinary contribution from critical discourse analysis and the new sociology of capitalism (with Eve Chiapello)
1 The theoretical framework of the ‘new spirit of capitalism’
1.1 The notion of the ‘spirit of capitalism’
1.2 The fairness dimension of the spirit of capitalism: the ‘cité’ model
2 Critical discourse analysis
3 Analysis of the sample text
3.1 Genre
3.2 Style
3.3 Discourse
3.4 Texturing
4 Conclusion
11. Critical discourse analysis in researching language in the new capitalism: overdetermination, transdisciplinarity and textual analysis
1 Language in new capitalism
2 An example: the Blair text
3 The global space–time
4 The national space–time
5 CDA in research on new capitalism
6 Overdetermination and transdisciplinarity
7 Space–time and equivalence/difference relations
8 Conclusion
12. Marx as a critical discourse analyst: the genesis of a critical method and its relevance to the critique of global capital (with Phil Graham)
1 Introduction
2 Critical discourse analysis: a brief overview
3 Marx, classical scholarship and language: an historical contextualisation
4 The ‘doctrine of abstraction’ and its significance to Marx’s thought
5 Dialectics: outlines of a method
6 Ideology: language and language critique
7 Language critique in the development of Marx’s method
8 Critique of Hegel’s Doctrine of the State
9 Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts
10 Capital
11 Critique of the Gotha Programme
12 The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte
13 Marx and CDA
14 Marx as discourse analyst
15 Conclusion
13. Critical discourse analysis, organisational discourse and organisational change
1 Organising, organisation and organisational discourse
2 A critical realist approach to discourse analysis
2.1 Critical realism
2.2 Critical discourse analysis
3 Discourse analysis in a critical realist approach to organisational studies and organisational change
3.1 Critical realist approaches to organisational studies
3.2 CDA and organisational change
4 Conclusion
Section E: Political discourse
Introduction
14. New Labour: a language perspective
1 Critical discourse analysis
2 CDA of the language of New Labour
3 The political discourse of the ‘Third Way’
4 Genres of government
5 Blair’s political style
6 Conclusion
15. Democracy and the public sphere in critical research on discourse
1 Arendt on the public sphere
2 Framework for CDA of the public sphere
2.1 A discursive practice as a regulative practice
2.2 A discursive practice as a space of emergence
2.3 A discursive practice as a principle of recontextualisation
2.4 A discursive practice as a constituent of action
2.5 Public sphere discursive practices within social orders of discourse
3 Example: monarchy – the nation decides
3.1 Regulative practice
3.2 Space of emergence
4 Conclusion
16. Critical discourse analysis and citizenship (with Simon Pardoe and Bronislaw Szerszynski)
1 Researching citizenship
2 Constructing the object of research
3 A practical and theoretical framework for the analysis of participatory events
3.1 The value of CDA in researching citizenship as a communicative achievement
3.2 Researching the chains of events and texts: intertextuality, interdiscursivity and recontextualisation
4 Three interrelated strands for the analysis
4.1 Strand 1: The genre struggles within and around the public interactions
4.2 Strand 2: Switches in/struggles over voice and style
4.3 Strand 3: The discourses around public participation
5 Conclusion
17. ‘Political correctness’: the politics of culture and language
1 Socio-historical context: society, culture and language
2 Theory: language, social practices and social change
3 Political strategy and tactics: the politics of culture and language
4 Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Section F: Globalisation and ‘transition’
Introduction
18. Language and globalisation
1 Views on discourse as a facet of globalisation
2 Discourses of globalisation
3 Re-scaling
4 Media and mediation
5 Globals and locals
6 War and terrorism
7 Conclusion
19. Global capitalism, terrorism and war: a discourse-analytical perspective
Conclusion
20. Discourse and ‘transition’ in Central and Eastern Europe
1 Critical discourse analysis
2 Discourse as an element of processes of ‘transition’
3 Theorising ‘transition’
4 Recontextualisation of the ‘knowledge-based economy’ and ‘information society’ in Romanian policy texts
5 Conclusion
Section G: Language and education
Introduction
21. Critical language awareness and self-identity in education
1 Language awareness: critical and non-critical approaches
2 Critical language awareness in practice: identity in academic writing
22. Global capitalism and critical awareness of language
1 An example: the discourse of ‘flexibility’
2 Discourse, knowledge and social change
3 Textually mediated social life
4 Discourse, social difference and social identity
5 Commodification of discourse
6 Discourse and democracy
7 Critical awareness of discourse and the new global capitalism
8 Critique: social science, discourse analysis, discourse awareness
8.1 Critical discourse awareness and education
Bibliography and references
Index
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