• español 
    • español
    • English
    • français
  • FacebookPinterestTwitter
  • español
  • English
  • français
Ver ítem 
  •   DIGIBUG Principal
  • 1.-Investigación
  • Departamentos, Grupos de Investigación e Institutos
  • Departamento de Filologías Inglesa y Alemana
  • DFIA - Artículos
  • Ver ítem
  •   DIGIBUG Principal
  • 1.-Investigación
  • Departamentos, Grupos de Investigación e Institutos
  • Departamento de Filologías Inglesa y Alemana
  • DFIA - Artículos
  • Ver ítem
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Approaches to the discourse of terror: How power relations are represented through forced primings in jihadist magazines

[Word 2007] The idea of power relations_v5.2.docx (602.8Kb)
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/100290
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1075/ps.21015.pat?locatt=mode:legacy
Exportar
RISRefworksMendeleyBibtex
Estadísticas
Ver Estadísticas de uso
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítem
Autor
Patterson, Katie Jane; Pace-Sigge, Michael T. L.
Editorial
Encarnación Hidalgo Tenorio
Materia
extemist language
 
discourse analysis
 
lexical priming
 
Fecha
2022
Referencia bibliográfica
5. Patterson, K.J. and Pace-Sigge, M.T., 2022. ‘Approaches to the discourse of terror: How power relations are represented through forced primings in jihadist magazines.’ Pragmatics and Society, 13(3), pp.404-430.
Patrocinador
This research forms part of the project ISCID and has received funding from the European Commission H2020 MSCA-IF-2019-ID:882556
Resumen
This chapter presents an investigation into the evidence of fixed language use within jihadist magazines and the extent to which these fixed patterns reflect specific power relations within the text community. The research presents the hypothesis that the writers of articles in jihadist magazines have become primed to employ the words and sets of words through their repeat usage (cf. Hoey 2005, 2017). Thus, lexical and grammatical associations and constructions are analysed to determine the extent to which language use is unique in our corpus. Evidence is presented in the unique way power relationships are linguistically expressed; it is argued here that this reflects the ways in which the writers are primed for their motives or aims of recruitment. Here, a number of keywords that indicate power relations yet are fairly common in news discourse are compared to show the collocation and colligation divergence where jihadist magazines are compared with occurrences in the COCA magazines sub-corpus covering the same time period.
Colecciones
  • DFIA - Artículos

Mi cuenta

AccederRegistro

Listar

Todo DIGIBUGComunidades y ColeccionesPor fecha de publicaciónAutoresTítulosMateriaFinanciaciónPerfil de autor UGREsta colecciónPor fecha de publicaciónAutoresTítulosMateriaFinanciación

Estadísticas

Ver Estadísticas de uso

Servicios

Pasos para autoarchivoAyudaLicencias Creative CommonsSHERPA/RoMEODulcinea Biblioteca UniversitariaNos puedes encontrar a través deCondiciones legales

Contacto | Sugerencias