Fr. 76.00

The War on Terror Narrative - Discourse Intertextuality in Construction Contestation of

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext [Hodge's] well-designed and well-executed multi-disciplinary study goes a long way in helping us understand the dynamic and complex nature of the macro-micro relationship. Informationen zum Autor Adam Hodges is Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Humanities at Carnegie Mellon University. Klappentext The "War on Terror" Narrative provides a longitudinal and holistic study of the formation, circulation, and contestation of the Bush administration's narrative about the "war on terror." Zusammenfassung The War on Terror Narrative analyzes three types of data-presidential speeches, U.S. media discourse, and focus group interviews-to provide a longitudinal and holistic study of the formation, circulation, and contestation of the Bush administration's narrative about the "war on terror." The narrative sustains, in Foucault's terms, a "regime of truth" by placing boundaries around what can meaningfully be said and understood about the subject. Adam Hodges illustrates that even as social actors resist the narrative and the policy it entails, they appropriate its language to be heard and understood. While this often works to strengthen the narrative, discourse is inevitably reshaped as it enters into new contexts. This recontextualization allows for the introduction of new meanings, and therein lies the potential for resistance and social transformation. Hodges argues that applying ideas on intertextuality to the analysis of political discourse is central to understanding the way micro-level discursive action contributes to macro-level cultural narratives like the Bush "War on Terror" narrative. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1.: . Introduction 2.: The Characterization of 9/11 and America's Response to Terrorism 3.: The Narrative's Part-Whole Textual Interdependence 4.: The Construction of Al Qaeda and Iraq as Linked Antagonists 5.: Intertextual Series: Reproduction and Resistance in the Media 6.: . Talking Politics: The Narrative's Reception among College Students 7.: . Whose Vietnam?: Discursive Competition over the Vietnam Analogy 8.: Conclusion Appendix A. Corpus of Presidential Speeches Appendix B. Transcription Conventions for Presidential Speeches Appendix C. Transcription Conventions for Focus Group Interviews Media Discourse Data References Index ...

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