Discourse Analysis: Contextualism and Reductionism

2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 440-447
Author(s):  
Setareh Majidi

For the past twenty to thirty years, a good part of the domain of linguistics has been occupied by what has been called discourse analysis. Whereas syntax and semantics are concerned by the sentence and the units from which the sentence is built, discourse analysis claims that interpretation cannot accounted for at the level of the sentence and that a bigger unit, such as discourse should be used to account for language interpretation. We want to show here that discourse is not, in any sense, a well defined object and that, though it is certainly necessary to analyze how a given sequence of sentences is processed and understood, the notion of discourse,  A and related notions such as coherence does not have much to say about it. We rely on epistemological considerations about the necessity of a moderate reductionism and sketch on account of linguistic interpretation which accounts for contextual factors in linguistic interpretation through the notion of utterance (vs. sentence) and a development of Sperber & Wilsons Relevance Theory.

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 664-680
Author(s):  
Omer Michaelis

AbstractIn his works from the past decade, Menachem Fisch offered an analysis of a crucial distinction between two modes of rationalized transformation: an intra-framework transformation and an inter-framework one, the latter entailing a revolutionary shift of the framework itself. In this article, I analyze the attempt to produce such a framework transition in the tradition of Jewish Halakha (i.e., Jewish Law) by one of the key figures in its history, Moses Maimonides (1135–1204), and to explore how this transition was rationalized and promoted by the utilization of crisis discourse. Using discourse analysis, I analyze the introduction to Maimonides’ great legal code, Mishneh Torah, and explore the modes by which he sought to establish, install and stabilize a homogenous and centralistic legal order at the center of which will lie one – that is, his own – Halakhic book.


2021 ◽  
pp. 175048132110437
Author(s):  
Guofeng Wang ◽  
Xiuzhen Wu ◽  
Qiao Li

This study conducts a bibliometric analysis of news discourse analysis using CiteSpace to sketch its scientific landscape based on journal articles in English in the Scopus database from 1988 through 2020. The statistical analysis provides evidence for the interdisciplinarity of this area, and shows an upward trend in general over these years as well as an accelerating growth rate in the past decade. Findings also indicate that the problem-oriented CDA has gained the most popularity in this area since its emergence, and the appraisal framework, multimodality analysis, and discursive news values have become three hotspots of news discourse analysis. In addition, the authors in the West have contributed most in this area, but those from Chinese Mainland, Malaysia, South Africa, and Indonesia have gradually been an emerging powerhouse, which has added diversity in topics and will enhance equality and promote dialogue between different communities, ethnics, and races across the globe.


2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 680-701
Author(s):  
Ashlee Borgkvist ◽  
Jaklin Eliott ◽  
Shona Crabb ◽  
Vivienne Moore

Expectations for fathers have changed over the past few decades—research has shown that many men express more egalitarian views toward fatherhood and being more involved in parenting, particularly in the caretaking and emotional aspects of parenting. However, despite intentions expressed before parenthood, parenting will often play out along more traditional, gendered lines. In this research, we demonstrate how discourses used by fathers might work to maintain gendered divisions in relation to parenting and work. Data were collected through semistructured interviews that covered men’s experiences of work and parenting. Discourse analysis was employed to analyze the data. We identified that while participants expressed a desire to be involved fathers, often this did not transpire. Participants’ inability to, or decisions not to be, actively involved was accounted for in various ways, and suggested a tension between what fathers recognize they should be doing, and what they are doing, as parents.


2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 294-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lux Ratnamohan ◽  
Sarah Mares ◽  
Derrick Silove

Objective: To build an account of how bereaved Tamil refugee and asylum seeker children, resettled in Australia, had processed the loss of their dead or missing fathers. Method: Phenomenological and discourse analysis was applied to attachment narratives of nine children (aged 11–17 years) and their surviving mothers in families that lost fathers in war-related circumstances. The narratives were analysed through the lens of Crittenden’s Dynamic-Maturational Model of Attachment and Adaptation (DMM) and Klass’ cross-cultural model of grief. Results: Two divergent pathways — ‘burying the past’ and ‘reifying the past’ — emerged, encompassing the children’s contrasting patterns of information processing regarding loss and trauma (dismissing or preoccupying) and representation of the past (distant-buried or rich-reconstructed). Each pathway reflected a strategic compromise between the constraints and resources presented to the child by the circumstances of the loss (ambiguous or confirmed), the response of their surviving parent (stricken or stoic) and the collective narrative surrounding the loss (silenced or valorised). Conclusion: The DMM’s conceptualisation of attachment as self-protective strategies for navigating danger was helpful in explaining the contrasting adaptations of refugee children to loss and trauma. However, to understand the multivalent meanings of these adaptations, there was a need to situate child–parent attachment relationships within the wider sociocultural reconfigurations arising from contexts of political violence.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 5927-5927
Author(s):  
Jean Yared ◽  
Daisuke Goto ◽  
Eberechukwu Onukwugha ◽  
Rahul Khairnar ◽  
Brian Seal ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Multiple myeloma (MM) is a disease of the elderly with a median age at diagnosis of 70 years. Autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) is a preferred treatment for younger patients but is also an option for older adults (i.e., patients >65 years) with good performance status. A previous SEER-Medicare study of MM patients diagnosed from 2000-2007 found that 5.8% underwent ASCT (Winn, et al. JNCI, 2015). The availability of ASCTs for older adults with MM has increased in the past decade due to improvement in supportive care and Medicare coverage approval. Apart from age and medical eligibility, several patient and contextual factors, such as comorbidity, may influence the receipt of ASCT in the MM population. There is limited information on the determinants of receipt of ASCT in older adults over the past decade in the US. Objective: To identify ASCT recipients among a cohort of elderly individuals with MM in order to determine characteristics associated with receiving ASCT. Specifically, this study identifies patient and contextual factors associated with the receipt of ASCT. Methods: This retrospective cohort study used Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) registry and linked Medicare claims (SEER-Medicare) data. We identified individuals aged 66 and above, with an incident diagnosis of MM between 2007 and 2011 as well as claims data from 2006 to 2012. We required continuous enrollment in Medicare Parts A and B 12 months prior to and including the month of diagnosis and six months post-diagnosis. We required continuous Part D enrollment two months pre- and six months post-diagnosis. Patients were followed until death or censoring due to non-continuous Parts A and B enrollment after six months. ICD-9 and HCPCS codes were used to identify ASCT. Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) was used to measure the number of comorbid conditions at the time of MM diagnosis using claims one year prior to diagnosis. Student's t-test and Chi-square test of proportions were used to compare those who received ASCT to those who did not based on patient-level factors (i.e., age, gender, race, comorbidity status), geographic regions (i.e., Northeast, Midwest, West and South), and over time (diagnosed in 2007-2009 vs. diagnosed in 2010 to 2011). We also measured the time to ASCT for those who underwent ASCT. Results: Among 3,318 individuals with MM who met our inclusion criteria, 226 (6.8%) underwent ASCT during the follow-up period. ASCT recipients were younger, more likely to be male, white non-Hispanic, and have fewer comorbid conditions (Table 1). The median time from MM diagnosis to ASCT was 278 days. The rate of ASCT among recipients aged 66-69 was 23.2%, 7.3% among recipients aged 70-74, and 0.84% among those aged 75+ (p<0.001). The rate of ASCT was higher among males (8.5%) than females (5.2%) (p<0.001). Rates of ASCT were higher among those who were non-Hispanic white (8.1%), compared to those who were non-Hispanic black (3.5%) or of another race/ethnicity (4.1%) (p<0.001). Among those with CCI=0, 9.9% underwent ASCT, while 7.2% of those with CCI=1 underwent ASCT and 2.7% of those with CCI>1 underwent ASCT (p<0.001). Rates of ASCT were similar across the geographic regions (p=0.15). Of those who were diagnosed in 2007-2009, 6.0% received transplant, while 7.8% of those who were diagnosed in 2010-2011 received transplant (p=0.04). Conclusion: ASCT is performed in less than 1 in 10 patients aged 66 and older. A greater proportion of ASCT recipients were non-Hispanic white, male, diagnosed at a younger age, and had a lower comorbidity burden compared to non-transplant patients. Comparing the pre-2007 estimate from the aforementioned study to our early (2007-09) and late (2010-11) period estimates, our results illustrate an upward trend in ASCT over the past decade. We were unable to identify smoldering MM patients who would not be candidates for ASCT. This may bias our estimates downward. The aforementioned previous study found that 62% of recipients were 66-69, 32% of recipients were 70-74, while 6% were 75+ (Winn, et al. JNCI, 2015). These rates did not differ greatly from our findings indicating that the age distribution of ASCT recipients has remained stable over a 10 year period of observation. Future studies should investigate the implications of these differences for post-transplant outcomes among older MM patients. Disclosures Goto: Novartis AG: Research Funding. Onukwugha:Takeda: Research Funding; IMPAQ International: Honoraria; Bayer Healthcare: Research Funding. Seal:Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited: Employment, Equity Ownership. Romanus:Takeda: Employment. Yong:Takeda: Employment. Slejko:Takeda: Research Funding; PhRMA: Research Funding; National Pharmaceutical Council: Research Funding.


Author(s):  
Charles Forceville

AbstractCartoons, like other forms of mass media, are aimed not just at anybody, but at a multitude of individuals. The extent to which these numerous individuals understand the cartoons in the same way depends not only on their shared interpretations of the word and image texts themselves, but also on interpretation strategies suggested by the (near)identical circumstances under which the cartoons are accessed. As Gail Dines points out, ‘‘locating cartoons within the cultural realm of mass communication requires an understanding of how these media forms come into existence and how they are consumed by the intended audience’’ (1995: 238). To understand better how cartoons are processed, it is necessary to generalize about contextual factors governing their perception. In this paper I examine cartoons by the Dutchman Peter van Straaten that all appeared on a tear-off calendar in the year 2001. The question addressed is how the temporal and spatial circumstances under which the cartoons are accessed, in combination with the generic conventions of the calendar in which they appear, trigger the activation of specific cognitive schemata, and thus steer and constrain possible interpretations. The general framework in which these matters are discussed is Sperber and Wilson’s (1995) Relevance Theory.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 84-90
Author(s):  
L. L. Baranova

The article sheds light on some of the new developments in English under the influence of the COVID-19 pandemic: namely, various types of neologisms, which have appeared over the past year and a half. The paper offers an overview of these new formations, supplemented by discourse analysis. The study is based on the material gleaned from online editions of The Economist newspaper, with the examples selected using the method of continuous sampling. Research results indicate that the majority of neologisms are portmanteau words; however, abbreviations, compounds and new coinages referring to people’s work arrangement are also encountered. In addition, some data on the increase in dictionary searches for words connected with the pandemic are adduced. COVID-19 has boosted the capacity of the English language for expanding its vocabulary, and the changes brought about by this process should be thoroughly studied and understood.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jay Emery

Abstract This article investigates the affective politics of heritage, memory, place and regeneration in Mansfield, UK. Ravaged by workplace closures from the 1980s, Mansfield's local government and cultural partners have supposedly put heritage at the centre of urban regeneration policies. Principal are ambiguous, and forestalled, ambitions to mobilize the industrial past to build urban futures. Yet these heritages, and their attendant memories and histories, are emotionally evocative and highly contested. The affective politics are played out in the material, embodied and atmospheric remains of the industrial past as Mansfield struggles to make sense of its industrial legacies. Drawing on Critical Discourse Analysis, archival research, observant participation and interview data, this article critiques heritage-based regeneration; examines interrelations between local memory, class, place and history; and interprets tensions between competing imaginaries of what Mansfield is, was and should be. Contributing to work on memory and class in post-industrial towns, the article demonstrates that affect and place should be central to our considerations of heritage-based urban regeneration. In the case of Mansfield, an 'emotional regeneration' will be denied until a shared practice of remembering the affective ruptures of the past is enabled.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shenley Audrey Alkins

The purpose of this research is to map the conceptual and theoretical foundations of sustainability and sustainable development, specifically how these concepts have been defined, conceptualized, and operationalized in the past, in effect to elucidate knowledge gaps and limitations of current research. This research uses an exploratory approach to textual discourse analysis to uncover the ways in which sustainability and sustainable development has been defined, conceptualized, and operationalized by the City of Toronto over the past thirty years. The findings of this research indicate that despite poorly defined conceptions of sustainability and sustainable development, operationalization has continued. However, many challenges to conceptualization and operationalization remain, such as those related to cross-scale coordination, understanding of social, economic, and environmental interdependencies, inadequate understanding of environmental conditions, and issues related to information sharing and reporting across institutions. Keywords sustainability; urban sustainability; sustainable development; municipal policy; municipal decisionmaking; textual data analysis; content analysis; discourse analysis


2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 114-128
Author(s):  
Khabibi Muhammad Luthfi

This paper aims to explore the concepts, methods and significance of philology Islam Nusantara and contextualization in manuscripts from Indonesia. It departs from the problems that the Islamic manuscripts archipelago that has not been widely studied, whereas in it save the value, thought and culture of the past scholars Nusantara which would clarify the concept of Islam Nusantara itself. With the approach of descriptive data-based literature and discourse analysis found that the concepts, methods and significance of philology Islam Nusantara almost the same as philology in general and the only difference being the object of study, in addition to the contextualization as an approach to the study of Islam in Indonesia, particularly related to Islamic manuscripts archipelago could be advised to use The new philology without leaving classical philology.   Tulisan ini bertujuan mengeksplorasi konsep, metode dan signifikansi filologi Islam Nusantara serta kontekstualisasinya dalam pernaskahan Indonesia. Ini berangkat  dari persoalan bahwa manuskrip Islam Nusantara yang belum banyak dikaji, padahal di dalamnya menyimpan nilai, pemikiran dan budaya ulama Nusantara masa lampau yang tentunya akan menjernihkan mengenai konsep Islam Nusantara itu sendiri. Dengan pendekatan deksriptif berbasis data pustaka dan analisis wacana ditemukan bahwa konsep, metode dan signifikansi filologi Islam Nusantara hampir sama dengan filologi pada umumnya dan yang membedakan hanya objek kajiannya, selain itu kontektualisasinya sebagai pendekatan studi Islam di Indonesia, terutama terkait manuskrip Islam Nusantara bisa disarankan menggunakan filologi baru tanpa meninggalkan filologi klasik.  


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