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Actor descriptions, action attributions, and argumentation : towards a systematization of CDA analytical categories in the representation of social groups.

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Actor descriptions, action attributions, and argumentation : towards a systematization of CDA analytical categories in the representation of social groups. / KhosraviNik, Majid.
In: Critical Discourse Studies, Vol. 7, No. 1, 02.2010, p. 55-72.

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@article{0497c6a53ed74f9bb52f127dd2f68823,
title = "Actor descriptions, action attributions, and argumentation : towards a systematization of CDA analytical categories in the representation of social groups.",
abstract = "CDA studies on out-groups, i.e. immigrants, within Wodak's Discourse-Historical and van Dijk's Socio-cognitive approaches along other approaches, have suggested methods and analytical categories through which discursive representations of social groups are investigated. Consequently, several listings of relevant analytical categories have been proposed and applied to many subsequent studies. However, the variety of the proposed methods in representation of social groups by various scholars and the often unclear accounts for the links among various levels of discourse analysis seem to have created a multitude of discursive strategies that can be overwhelming if not confusing. This paper is an attempt to make explicit various levels of discourse analysis on representation of social groups from detailed textual analysis to discourse topics and tries to show how micro-level analytical categories are related to macro-structure within various levels of contexts. Specifically, a three-level analytical framework is suggested for textual analysis of the representation of social groups which divides the text analysis into three domains of social actors, social actions and argumentation. It is suggested that the analysis should look at what is (not) in the text in terms of the three domains mentioned, and investigate how these domains are linguistically realized through a set of linguistic processes/mechanisms.",
keywords = "critical discourse analysis, representation of social groups, CDA methodology, critical textual analysis, self and other representation, macro and micro links",
author = "Majid KhosraviNik",
year = "2010",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1080/17405900903453948",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "55--72",
journal = "Critical Discourse Studies",
issn = "1740-5904",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Actor descriptions, action attributions, and argumentation : towards a systematization of CDA analytical categories in the representation of social groups.

AU - KhosraviNik, Majid

PY - 2010/2

Y1 - 2010/2

N2 - CDA studies on out-groups, i.e. immigrants, within Wodak's Discourse-Historical and van Dijk's Socio-cognitive approaches along other approaches, have suggested methods and analytical categories through which discursive representations of social groups are investigated. Consequently, several listings of relevant analytical categories have been proposed and applied to many subsequent studies. However, the variety of the proposed methods in representation of social groups by various scholars and the often unclear accounts for the links among various levels of discourse analysis seem to have created a multitude of discursive strategies that can be overwhelming if not confusing. This paper is an attempt to make explicit various levels of discourse analysis on representation of social groups from detailed textual analysis to discourse topics and tries to show how micro-level analytical categories are related to macro-structure within various levels of contexts. Specifically, a three-level analytical framework is suggested for textual analysis of the representation of social groups which divides the text analysis into three domains of social actors, social actions and argumentation. It is suggested that the analysis should look at what is (not) in the text in terms of the three domains mentioned, and investigate how these domains are linguistically realized through a set of linguistic processes/mechanisms.

AB - CDA studies on out-groups, i.e. immigrants, within Wodak's Discourse-Historical and van Dijk's Socio-cognitive approaches along other approaches, have suggested methods and analytical categories through which discursive representations of social groups are investigated. Consequently, several listings of relevant analytical categories have been proposed and applied to many subsequent studies. However, the variety of the proposed methods in representation of social groups by various scholars and the often unclear accounts for the links among various levels of discourse analysis seem to have created a multitude of discursive strategies that can be overwhelming if not confusing. This paper is an attempt to make explicit various levels of discourse analysis on representation of social groups from detailed textual analysis to discourse topics and tries to show how micro-level analytical categories are related to macro-structure within various levels of contexts. Specifically, a three-level analytical framework is suggested for textual analysis of the representation of social groups which divides the text analysis into three domains of social actors, social actions and argumentation. It is suggested that the analysis should look at what is (not) in the text in terms of the three domains mentioned, and investigate how these domains are linguistically realized through a set of linguistic processes/mechanisms.

KW - critical discourse analysis

KW - representation of social groups

KW - CDA methodology

KW - critical textual analysis

KW - self and other representation

KW - macro and micro links

U2 - 10.1080/17405900903453948

DO - 10.1080/17405900903453948

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

SP - 55

EP - 72

JO - Critical Discourse Studies

JF - Critical Discourse Studies

SN - 1740-5904

IS - 1

ER -