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"Wodak, Ruth"
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Multilingual encounters in Europe's institutional spaces
Multilingual encounters have been commonplace in many types of institutions, and have become an essential part of supranational institutions such as the EU since their inception. This volume explores and discusses different ways of researching the discursive dimension of these encounters, and critically examines their relevance to policy, politics, and society as a whole.
The Discursive Construction of National Identity
by
Liebhart, Karin
,
Reisigl, Martin
,
Wodak, Ruth
in
Austria
,
Discourse analysis
,
Discourse analysis -- Europe
2009
How do we construct national identities in discourse? Which topics, which discursive strategies and which linguistic devices are employed to construct national sameness and uniqueness on the one hand, and differences to other national collectives on the o
A useful methodological synergy? Combining critical discourse analysis and corpus linguistics to examine discourses of refugees and asylum seekers in the UK press
by
BAKER, PAUL
,
KHOSRAVINIK, MAJID
,
GABRIELATOS, COSTAS
in
Applied linguistics
,
Asylum
,
Asylum seekers
2008
This article discusses the extent to which methods normally associated with corpus linguistics can be effectively used by critical discourse analysts. Our research is based on the analysis of a 140-million-word corpus of British news articles about refugees, asylum seekers, immigrants and migrants (collectively RASIM). We discuss how processes such as collocation and concordance analysis were able to identify common categories of representation of RASIM as well as directing analysts to representative texts in order to carry out qualitative analysis. The article suggests a framework for adopting corpus approaches in critical discourse analysis.
Journal Article
Discourse and Discrimination
by
Reisigl, Martin
,
Wodak, Ruth
in
Antisemitism
,
Antisemitism -- Austria -- History
,
Antisemitism in language
2001,2005,2000
Discourse and Discrimination is a study of how racism, antisemitism and ethnicism are reflected in discourse. The authors first survey five established discourse analysis approaches before providing their own model and three case-studies. Drawing on a wide range of sources, they question why racism and anti-Semitism are still virulent worldwide.
Martin Reisigl is based at the University of Vienna and is co-author of The Discursive Construction of National Identity. Ruth Wodak is Professor of Applied Linguistics in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Vienna. Her books include Disorders of Discourse, Gender and Discourse, and Language, Power and Ideology.
Analysing Fascist Discourse
by
John E. Richardson
,
Ruth Wodak
in
applied linguistics
,
Central Asian, Russian & Eastern European Studies
,
Discourse Analysis
2013,2012
This book focuses primarily on continuities and discontinuities of fascist politics as manifested in discourses of post-war European countries. Many traumatic pasts in Europe are linked to the experience of fascist and national-socialist regimes in the 20th century and to related colonial and imperialist expansionist politics. And yet we are again confronted with the emergence, rise and success of extreme right wing political movements, across Europe and beyond, which frequently draw on fascist and national-socialist ideologies, themes, idioms, arguments and lexical items. Post-war taboos have forced such parties, politicians and their electorate to frequently code their exclusionary fascist rhetoric.
This collection shows that an interdisciplinary critical approach to fascist text and talk-subsuming all instances of meaning-making (oral, visual, written, sounds, etc.) and genres such as policy documents, speeches, school books, media reporting, posters, songs, logos and other symbols-is necessary to deconstruct exclusionary meanings and to confront their inegalitarian political projects.
Sociolinguistic Perspectives on Migration Control
by
Rheindorf, Markus
,
Wodak, Ruth
in
Discrimination
,
Emigration and immigration
,
Emigration and immigration -- Government policy
2020
In the midst of an international crisis in migration policy -
widely referred to as a 'refugee crisis' - this book brings
together timely analyses of the manifold and yet specific ways in
which migration affects globalized societies, set against the
background of the rise of nationalist and populist movements. The
voices of migrants and refugees are rarely heard in this context:
usually, they are debated about, summarized and reported but their
agency is denied. Each contribution to this volume adds an
empirical perspective to our understanding of how language relates
to migration in a specific national context. The chapters use
innovative combinations of multimodal, qualitative and quantitative
analyses to examine a broad range of genres and data related to the
voices of migrants and reporting about migrants.
The interplay of language ideologies and contextual cues in multilingual interactions: Language choice and code-switching in European Union institutions
by
Krzyżanowski, Michał
,
Wodak, Ruth
,
Forchtner, Bernhard
in
Code Switching
,
Communication
,
Critical Discourse Analysis
2012
This article analyzes multilingual practices in interactions inside European Union (EU) institutions. On the basis of our fieldwork conducted in EU organizational spaces throughout 2009, we explore different types of communication in order to illustrate how Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) and officials at the European Commission practice and perform multilingualism in their everyday work. In our theoretical and methodological framework, we draw on existent sociolinguistic ethnographical research into organizations and interactions, and integrate a multilevel (macro) contextual and sequential (micro) analysis of manifold data (observations, field notes, recordings of official and semi-official meetings, interviews, etc.). In this way, a continuum of context-dependent multilingual practices becomes apparent, which are characterized by different patterns of language choice and which serve a range of both manifest and latent functions. By applying the Discourse-Historical Approach (DHA) of Critical Discourse Studies (CDS), the intricacies of the increasingly complex phenomenon of multilingualism in transnational-organizational spaces, which are frequently characterized by diverse power-related and other asymmetries of communication, can be adequately coped with. (Code-switching, multilingualism, power, institutional spaces, European Union, ethnography, discourse-historical approach, critical discourse studies)*
Journal Article
Language, power and identity
2012
How are identities constructed in discourse? How are national and European identities tied to language and communication? And what role does power have – power in discourse, over discourse and of discourse? This paper seeks to identify and analyse processes of identity construction within Europe and at its boundaries, particularly the diversity of sources and forms of expression in several genres and contexts. It draws on media debates on Austrian versus Standard High German, on focus group discussions with migrants in eight European countries and on public and political debates on citizenship in the European Union which screen newly installed language tests. The analysis of different genres and publics all illustrate the complexity of national and transnational identity constructions in a globalised world. What is experienced as European or as outside of Europe is the result of multiple activities, some of them consciously planned in the sense of political, economic or cultural intervention, others more hidden, indirect, in the background. Such developments are contradictory rather than harmonious, proceeding in ‘loops’ and partial regressions (rather than in a linear, uni-directional or teleological way). Thus, an interdisciplinary approach suggests itself which accounts for diverse context-dependent discursive and social practices.
Journal Article
Handbook of communication in the public sphere
by
Wodak, Ruth
,
Koller, Veronika
in
Applied linguistics
,
Communication
,
Critical discourse analysis
2010,2008
The Handbooks of Applied Linguistics provide a state-of-the-art description of established and emerging areas of Applied Linguistics. Each volume gives an overview of the field, explains the most important traditions and their findings, identifies the gaps in current research, and gives perspectives for future directions.