I Am Proud to Be a Traitor: The emotion/opinion interplay in jihadist magazines
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Materia
Jihadism Appraisal theory
Fecha
2022Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Benítez Castro, M. Á. et al. I Am Proud to Be a Traitor: The emotion/opinion interplay in jihadist magazines. Pragmatics and Society, 13, 3, 2022, 501-531(31). [https://doi.org/10.1075/ps.21029.ben]
Patrocinador
FEDER-funded Research Projects: FFI2016-79748-R, A-HUM-250-UGR18, PY18-5020Resumen
Neojihadism taps successfully into the Internet’s influence to disseminate its oppression narrative
of Muslims vs. non-believers (Al Raffie 2012). Whilst this type of radicalisation has received
attention from psychoanalysis (Kobrin 2010), jihadist discourse is in need of more exhaustive
examination. By detecting recruiters’ key persuasive strategies, we may understand what can
move people to violent action. In this paper, we employ SFL Appraisal Theory (Martin and White
2005; Bednarek 2008, 2009; Benítez-Castro and Hidalgo-Tenorio 2019), to undertake a detailed
analysis of the interplay between EMOTION and OPINION in a pair of exemplars from two jihadist
magazines: The Taliban’s Azan and Al-Qaeda’s Inspire. The close inspection of these texts
reveals two distinct persuasive strategies: One revolving around a markedly negative pathos of
victimhood and deep distress caused by injustice, past and present; and the other conveying
pride and confidence at the many virtues behind the jihadi path.