EVENT Mar 01
ABSTRACT Mar 01
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Speech strategies and discourse analysis: the powerful and the oppressed (edited volume) (Edited volume)

N/A
Event: Edited volume
Categories: American, British, Lingustics, Rhetoric & Composition, African-American, Colonial, Revolution & Early National, Transcendentalists, 1865-1914, 20th & 21st Century, Medieval, Early Modern & Renaissance, Long 18th Century, Romantics, Victorian, 20th & 21st Century, Miscellaneous
Event Date: 2025-03-01 Abstract Due: 2025-03-01

Volume editors: Manuel Macías, PhD (Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain) and Carmen Gómez-Galisteo, PhD (UNED, Spain)

 

This edited volume analyzes political speeches in the last thirty years from a discourse
analysis perspective. In real and fictitious political speeches, as important as the contents,
are the emotions these texts elicit, moving audiences to support a running candidate or to
endorse a political decision. By political speeches we encompass political speeches given
in political meetings and rallies as well as parliamentary discourse in various legislative
bodies in real life or in fiction contexts. Public authorities’ declarations and statements
can also be considered. All these texts may be oral or in written form. While our focus is on political discourse in English-speaking contexts (L1, L2
or EFL), we also welcome submissions that offer a comparative perspective between, for
example, EU parliamentary discourse vs. American Congress speeches.
Potential submissions may address the following questions (although not limited to):
- What are the most common ideas in political discourse?
- What pragmatic strategies do speakers employ?
- What discourse analysis conventions are observed? Which are flounted?
- How do speakers engage their audiences? What strategies do they use?
- How do speakers appeal to their audiences? Do they appeal to their emotions, to
their feelings, to their rational thoughts?
- How can the language in political discourse be characterized? What register does
it belong to?
- What implicatures are used?
- How is persuasive language employed?
- How are inferences used? How does the speaker imply information? How is
presupposition used?
- How is politeness conveyed?
- How is the linguistic adaptation theory put into practice in political speeches?

 

DEADLINES
Submission of proposals – please submit a 500/1,000-word proposal along with your
contact information and a biographical statement (approx. 100/200 words) by March 1,
2025.
After acceptance, contributors are expected to submit final book chapters (6,000/8,000
words, including references and footnotes) by December 1, 2025.


Strong interest in this volume has been expressed by a leading academic publisher. More
information will be given to prospective contributors as details are finalized and a contract
is secured.

 

Bibliography
Elsanhoury, Mohamed, Abeer M. Refky M. Seddek, Névine M. Sarwat, & Riham. E. A.
Debian. "A Multimodal Discourse Analysis of Political Speeches: The Case of Donald
Trump’s 2016 Election Speeches." Journal of Language and Literature [Online], 20.2

(2020): 168. Web. 23 Oct. 2024 https://e-
journal.usd.ac.id/index.php/JOLL/article/view/2390

Fetzer, Anita, ed. The Pragmatics of Political Discourse: Explorations across cultures.
John Benjamins, 2013.
Locher, A., Miriam & Jucker, H. Andreas. (2021). The Pragmatics of Fiction. Edinburgh
University Press.
Pan, Jun. "The Pragmatics of Political Discourse: An Analytical Framework and a
Comparative Study of Policy Speeches in the United Kingdom and Hong Kong".
Bandung 6.2 (2019): 252-284.
Schaffner, Christina. 1996. “Editorial: Political Speeches and Discourse
Analysis.” Current Issues In Language and Society 3 (3): 201–4.
doi:10.1080/13520529609615471.

cgomez@flog.uned.es

Carmen Gomez-Galisteo