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Oppositions and ideology in news discourse PDF

241 Pages·2013·5.23 MB·English
by  DaviesMatt
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9781441180605_txt_print.indd 1 20/09/2012 15:12 Oppositions and Ideology in News Discourse 9781441180605_txt_print.indd 1 20/09/2012 15:12 Advances in Stylistics Series Editor: Dan McIntyre, University of Huddersfield, UK Editorial Board: Jean Boase-Beier, University of East Anglia, UK; Beatrix Busse, University of Berne, Switzerland; Szilvia Csábi, Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary; Monika Fludernik, University of Freiburg, Germany; Lesley Jeffries, University of Huddersfield, UK; Manuel Jobert, Jean Moulin University, France; Geoffrey Leech, Lancaster University, UK; Larry Stewart, College of Wooster, USA. Other Titles in the Series: Chick Lit: The Stylistics of Cappuccino Fiction, Rocío Montoro Corpus Stylistics in Principles and Practice, Yufang Ho D. H. Lawrence and Narrative Viewpoint, Violeta Sotirova Discourse of Italian Cinema and Beyond, Roberta Piazza I. A. Richards and the Rise of Cognitive Stylistics, David West Oppositions and Ideology in News Discourse, Matt Davies Opposition in Discourse, Lesley Jeffries Pedagogical Stylistics, Michael Burke, Szilvia Csábi, Lara Week and Judit Zerkowitz Stylistics and Shakespeare’s Language, Mireille Ravassat 9781441180605_txt_print.indd 2 20/09/2012 15:12 Oppositions and Ideology in News Discourse Matt Davies LONDON • NEW DELHI • NEW YORK • SYDNEY 9781441180605_txt_print.indd 3 20/09/2012 15:12 Bloomsbury Academic An imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc 50 Bedford Square 175 Fifth Avenue London New York WC1B 3DP NY 10010 UK USA www.bloomsbury.com First published 2013 © Matt Davies, 2013 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publishers. Matt Davies has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as Author of this work. Articles from the Daily Mail, Daily Mirror and Sunday Mirror are reprinted with permission. No responsibility for loss caused to any individual or organization acting on or refraining from action as a result of the material in this publication can be accepted by Bloomsbury Academic or the author. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN: 978-1-4411-4633-5 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Davies, Matt. Oppositions and ideology in news discourse / Matt Davies. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-4411-8060-5 (hardcover) -- ISBN 978-1-4411-6044-7 (ebook) -- ISBN 978-1- 4411-4633-5 (pdf) 1. Debates and debating in mass media--Great Britain. 2. Discourse analysis--Political aspects--Great Britain. 3. Mass media--Political aspects--Great Britain. 4. Journalism--Objectivity--Great Britain. 5. Journalism--Great Britain--Language. 6. Journalism--Political aspects--Great Britain. 7. Ideology--Political aspects--Great Britain. I. Title. P96.D382G74 2013 072.01’41--dc23 2012035232 Typeset by Fakenham Prepress Solutions, Fakenham, Norfolk NR21 8NN Contents Acknowledgements vii Preface ix Symbols and Typographical Conventions xiii List of Tables xv List of Figures xvii 1 Introducing Constructed Oppositions in News Discourse 1 2 Lexical Semantic Approaches to Opposition 19 3 The Role of Syntactic Frames in Opposition Triggering 43 4 The Role of Conceptual Relations in Opposition Triggering 93 5 Case Study 1: The Ideological Function of Clustered Oppositions in the Representation of Anti-War Protestors 123 6 Case Study 2: A Comparison of the Role of Constructed Oppositions in Two News Reports of a Countryside Alliance Protest March 147 7 Oppositions and Ideological Cohesion 179 8 A New Approach to Studying the Construction of ‘us’ and ‘them’ in News Discourse 189 Notes 211 References 215 Index 219 9781441180605_txt_print.indd 5 20/09/2012 15:12 9781441180605_txt_print.indd 6 20/09/2012 15:12 Acknowledgements When Cruse (1986) introduced his chapter on opposites by noting there is a thin line between the canonical opposites love and hate, it would not be surprising if he was referring to writing a book. That this study became a labour of love much more than a labour of hate (on a gradable rather than mutually exclusive plane of difference) is down to the unwavering support of a number of people as well as the fascinating subject matter. I am hugely grateful to Professor Lesley Jeffries in the English Department at the University of Huddersfield whose original research proposal kick-started many of the ideas in this study, and which I adapted and distorted with reckless abandon. Lesley’s book Opposition in Discourse: The Construction of Oppositional Meaning (2010) is an important companion title to mine in the same ‘Advances in Stylistics’ series and should be studied alongside this book. I am equally heavily indebted to Dr Dan McIntyre, also from the University of Huddersfield, who provided invaluable advice and encouragement in the writing up of this study. Thanks also to all my other colleagues in the English departments at the University of Huddersfield and more recently the University of Chester, especially those with whom I have shared coffee and offices and who have had to cope with my distracted mumblings and mad stares. The University of Huddersfield provided the much needed financial resources for this research for which I am much obliged. I am also very grateful to all of my students over the years who have indulged my opposition word association experiments (and also bad puns). On a more personal note, I would not have been able to finish this book without the love and support of the amazing Susan, my two boys Oscar and Alfie, and my parents Trevor and Christine who have gone well beyond the call of duty in coping with my non-standard life decisions. 9781441180605_txt_print.indd 7 20/09/2012 15:12 9781441180605_txt_print.indd 8 20/09/2012 15:12 Preface The structure of this book is influenced by a number of strands of inquiry reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of this study, including ideology, news discourse, opposi- tions (hence the title of the book) and lexical semantics. My primary interest is investigating how news discourse represents the same realities in multi-faceted ways, whilst predominantly reflecting the ideas, values and preoccupations of those in power. The stereotyping and stigmatizing of individuals and groups seen as threatening, extreme, ‘other’, is the staple diet of news stories, and this study started as an investigation into how binary oppositions in discourse contributed to these ‘othering’ processes. However, my research soon went in a number of interesting directions. A report in the Sunday Mirror (dated 16 February 2003) of the Stop the War Coalition protest march that took place in London on 15 February 2003 provided examples of opposi- tions which played a major role in the overall polemic of the news report. It was fascinating how the writer, who supported the aims of the demonstrators, expended an inordinate amount of energy using artificial oppositions to stigmatize certain groups of protestors in favour of others. These ‘constructed’ oppositions (i.e. those not conventionally recognized as opposites in everyday discourse) included pairs such as ‘placard’/‘banner’. To reassure myself that this pair would not conventionally be treated as opposites I conducted several word association tests at conferences and within seminar groups, and thankfully nobody came up with ‘placard’ as the opposite of ‘banner’, otherwize this investigation would have fallen at the first hurdle. So one of the first jobs was to justify further how it was that these and other words and phrases were being triggered as oppositions in this particular article, and also how it is we could understand this pair as opposites at the conceptual level. A detailed analysis of this news report is the focus of Chapter Five. At the same time I came across Steven Jones’s (2002) pioneering study Antonymy: A Corpus-based Perspective, which showed how conventional opposites (‘antonyms’) tended to be framed by certain easily identifiable syntactic structures (such as ‘X not Y’). Jones’s typology of these syntactic structures provided a valuable foundation for exploring more examples of ‘non-canonical’ oppositions in texts similar to the one above. Part of my mission has been to unpick the mystery of what constitutes an opposition, and whether there is indeed a set of pre-conditions without which pairs of words cannot be deemed oppositional. My tentative conclusion is that syntactic frames common to housing conventional one-word oppositions can also potentially trigger oppositional concepts from any words, phrases, or even clauses which sit in the X/Y positions of these frames. It is important therefore to point out to anybody approaching this book with the aim of reading about the hegemonic force of the press and the perpetuation of dominant ideology in discourse, that you will probably feel 9781441180605_txt_print.indd 9 20/09/2012 15:12

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