Discourse Analysis Summary
Discourse Analysis Summary
Discourse Analysis Summary
In view of the Covid-19 situation, these are the contents we have covered in class F2F,
reprinted here and provided for the students who could not attend or did not take notes
properly. Best of luck,
(b) How to analyze discourse using the different frameworks of DA, such as Text
Linguistics (grammar, semantics), Pragmatics and Critical Discourse Analysis,
These (a, b, c, and d) are designed to equip you with basic knowledge on discourse, how
it is used by humans, and how it can be analyzed/studied.
2) We accordingly try and elucidate such complex notions as text, discourse and
context.
3) We focus on the goals of discourse analysis. These will be recurrent themes of the
course and it is important to establish working definitions and understandings of
them to refer to at later points.
4) We consider the ideas of cohesion and coherence, facets that provide unity to a
text and allow one part to be interpreted in relation to another.
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2 goals of discourse analysis
As a term, Discourse Analysis first appeared in a research paper published by Zellig Harris
in 1952.
But Harris, an American structural linguist, did not use the terming DA as it used nowadays.
No linguistic and critical interdisciplinarity as used by such discourse analysts as Halliday and
Van Dijk.
In the 1960s and 1970s, Humanities scholars started to use the term DA to describe their
approach to the study and analysis of social interaction.
The earliest discourse analysts belonged to such fields as ethnography, anthropology and
sociology.
Not language use as such but social interaction was the main focus of study in these three
fields.
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Ethnomethodologists inspired other scholars who developed another method called
“Conversational Analysis,” which focuses on how conversations are ordered and structured.
Major conversation analysts, Emmanuel Schegloff, Harvey Sacksand, and Gail Jeffesons,
observe, describe, and analyze the sequential patterning of conversations.
In sum, since the 1950s through 1960s and 1970s to date, DA has developed along the
development of linguistics and other social and human sciences as well as the development of
the relationship between language, man and society.
Etymologically, the word “discourse” comes from the Latin word “discursus” which
basically denotes conversation and speech.
Discourse can also be seen as “parole” (in reference to Ferdinand de Saussure), a set of
utterances produced in given context. It can also be seen as “langue”.
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Before the advent of Discourse Analysis, language, both spoken and written, was mostly
analyzed as a structure without much importance given to the context and other meaning-
shaping elements.
Broadly, formalism and functionalism are two major approaches to language identified by
early linguists.
2) Being a complex enterprise, DA is taken in this course to mean the study of how
language is used/composed above the sentence or above the clause, focusing therefore on
larger linguistic combinations like conversations, exchanges, or written texts.
4) Brown and Yule (1983) contend that DA investigates “how addressers construct
linguistic messages for addressees and how addressees work on linguistic messages in
order to interpret them.”
So, based on Stubbs (1983), we can sum up the major mission of DA as follows:
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(c) DA is concerned with language use in social context
Detailed analysis:
a) The occurring and situating of a spoken or written message in a particular social context
shapes the meaning(s) wished to be communicated.
d) The main mission of DA is to examine, explain, and analyze how speakers and writers use
language to construct and interpret different meanings.
Applications:
1. Identity of speakers
2. Simultaneous pronunciation
3. Characteristics of speech
4. Transcription symbols
5. Metatranscription
– Repetition
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– Pause
• Language: Spoken, written, signed. (Linguistics & semiotics) + (Formal & informal, direct &
indirect, explicit & implicit, covert & overt, said & unsaid, voiced & unvoiced, crypted/cryptic
& decrypted/ decryptic coded/encoded & decoded/ uncoded, scripted & unscripted.
Paralanguage elements: Tone, pitch, stress, accent, intonation, pace, rhythm, facial
expressions, etc.
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a) Cohesion: grammatical relationship between parts of a sentence essential for its
interpretation;
d) Acceptability: indicates that the communicative product needs to be satisfactory in that the
audience approves it;
g) Intertextuality: reference to the world outside the text or the interpreters' schemata
b) Who is exercising the power, that is, whose discourses are being presented.
i) Would alternative wording of the same information have resulted in a different discourse
being privileged?
j) How are the events presented? How are people in the article characterized?
k) What message does the author intend you to get from the article?
l) Why was this particular picture chosen to accompany the article (if applicable)?
m) What repetition exists (a) within the article and (b) between different articles on the same
topic?
Example of Analysis:
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• Text taken from the Daily Mail Online (accessed 11 August 2009). The
main headline reads: “Baby Peter's father tries to cash in with
demand for £200,000 compensation”
Let's try to deconstruct this headline - this means, simply, let's use our
knowledge of how English is used to unpack the meaning of the text.
First, let's begin with “Baby Peter”: The newspaper writers and editors are
relying on the fact that this is a well-known case, which is often just
referred to in the media as, Baby Peter. However, the text refers to the
father of Baby Peter.
Next, the term “tries to cash in” is used. In common language this refers
to the act of trying to take advantage of a situation (either for money or in
a metaphoric sense, as in trying to take praise for someone else's
endeavors).
However, the next few words “with demand for £200,000” let’s us know
that this is not a metaphor but a literal claim for money and in an
opportunistic way.
Baby Peter's father tries to cash in with demand for £200,000 compensation
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The use of the term “cash” implies that the writer is unsympathetic with the father and there
is the hint that the writer believes that the father is an opportunist rather than a grieving
parent.
The sentence ends with the word compensation. This might seem to contradict the notion of
cashing-in as compensation is associated with genuine loss.
However, the word is most likely being used to refer to the legal process required to receive
such a payment. (Baby Peter's father tries to cash in with demand for £200,000 compensation).
Finally, the word “demand” is quite a forceful choice of word. To demand compensation
implies that the father believes he has this right but that he may receive some resistance
(from the judicial system or crime perpetrators, ex.)