They were not radical, even when they committed that: An appraisal-driven discourse analysis of feelings and attitudes towards the 17-A terrorist cell in Barcelona
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Benítez Castro, Miguel Ángel; Hidalgo Tenorio, Encarnación; Patterson, Katie Jane; Moyano, Manuel; González, IreneEditorial
John Benjamins
Materia
Appraisal theory Jihadism
Date
2023Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Benítez Castro, M. Á. et al. They were not radical, even when they committed that: An appraisal-driven discourse analysis of feelings and attitudes towards the 17-A terrorist cell in Barcelona. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict. [https://doi.org/10.1075/jlac.00084.ben]
Sponsorship
H2020 European Commission 882556; FEDER-Funded Research Projects A-HUM-250-UGR18, P18-FR-5020Abstract
Identity conflict and the loss of meaning experienced by some Muslim
young people in Western countries are key factors behind fanaticism, leading some of them to find purpose in life within extremist groups (AdamTroian et al. 2021; Moyano and González 2021). The narrative that emerges
from the radicalisation process provides a rich source for psychologists and
discourse analysts, exploring not only the ‘why’ and the ‘how’, but also
issues stemming from self-perception and other-representation. Such
conflict-based narratives materialise in individuals’ evaluative language patterns (Etaywe and Zappavigna 2022). In this paper, we conduct a close
analysis of the discursive construction of emotion and opinion in a collection of semi-structured interviews with social workers or neighbours who
knew the perpetrators of the 2017 terrorist attacks in Barcelona and Cambrils. To do so, we use corpus-driven methodologies and a refined version of
Martin and White’s (2005) Appraisal framework (see Benítez-Castro and
Hidalgo-Tenorio 2019). Our analysis aims to cast light on the social frictions
that may have contributed to their endorsement of violence (Moyano et al.
2021).