0000000000246638

AUTHOR

Johannes Angermuller

showing 3 related works from this author

Heterogeneous knowledge: Trends in German discourse analysis against an international background

2011

This contribution maps the complex field of discourse analysis in Germany by situating its major currents and putting them in historical perspective. In a first step, it presents the major intellectual sources, such as (post-)structuralism, pragmatism/interactionism as well as hermeneutics, which have served as a backdrop for the establishment of discourse analysis as an interdisciplinary field since the 1980s. In a second step, it takes a closer look at the intellectual conjunctures in the social sciences such as Critical Theory and systems theory before turning to the discourse analytical tendencies that have emerged since the 1980s in the light of Foucault's reception in Germany. Finally…

Cultural StudiesLinguistics and LanguagePragmatismPraxisInteractionismCivil discourseCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subjectDiscourse analysisLinguisticsEpistemologyCritical theoryStructuralismHermeneuticsSociologymedia_commonJournal of Multicultural Discourses
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From the many voices to the subject positions in anti-globalization discourse: Enunciative pragmatics and the polyphonic organization of subjectivity

2011

This contribution presents enunciative pragmatics as a methodological orientation to account for how written texts are contextualized in the act of reading. As an offspring of the pragmatic turn among French-speaking linguists, the enunciative approach is mobilized to analyze the cover page of a cartoon on the anti-globalization legend Jose Bove. Focusing on the complex interpretive problems of political discourse, the enunciative-pragmatic approach shows how readers construct subject positions following the text's complex indexicality. It reveals the polyphonic play of voices orchestrated by the enunciative markers. Therefore, enunciative pragmatics promises to bridge the gulf that separat…

SubjectivityLinguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subjectSubject (philosophy)PragmaticsLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsPoliticsArtificial IntelligenceReading (process)PolyphonySociologyConstruct (philosophy)Indexicalitymedia_commonJournal of Pragmatics
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Fixing meaning

2012

This contribution looks into a speech by Russian President Vladimir Putin after the terrorist attack against a high school in the Northern Caucasian town Beslan in September 2004, widely seen as marking the end of the liberal hegemony in the Russia of the post-soviet period. However, a closer look reveals the many possible readings that are made of the speech. According to the reactions found in a corpus of press articles, the speech activates both “internationalist” and “sovereignist” readings in media discourse. By pointing out the polyphonic organization of discourse, I make the case for a productive exchange between the French tradition of discourse analysis, interactionism and critical…

Linguistics and LanguageHistoryInteractionismHegemonySociology and Political ScienceCivil discourseDiscourse analysisMedia studiesLinguisticsCritical discourse analysisPoliticsPolyphonyMeaning (existential)SociologyJournal of Language and Politics
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