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Saying the unsayable: denying the Holocaust in media debates in Austria and the UK

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Saying the unsayable: denying the Holocaust in media debates in Austria and the UK. / Wodak, Ruth Emily.
Contemporary discourses of hate and radicalism across space and genres. ed. / Monika Kopytowska. Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2017. p. 13-39 (Benjamins Current Topics; Vol. 93).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Wodak, RE 2017, Saying the unsayable: denying the Holocaust in media debates in Austria and the UK. in M Kopytowska (ed.), Contemporary discourses of hate and radicalism across space and genres. Benjamins Current Topics, vol. 93, John Benjamins, Philadelphia, pp. 13-39. https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.93

APA

Wodak, R. E. (2017). Saying the unsayable: denying the Holocaust in media debates in Austria and the UK. In M. Kopytowska (Ed.), Contemporary discourses of hate and radicalism across space and genres (pp. 13-39). (Benjamins Current Topics; Vol. 93). John Benjamins. https://doi.org/10.1075/bct.93

Vancouver

Wodak RE. Saying the unsayable: denying the Holocaust in media debates in Austria and the UK. In Kopytowska M, editor, Contemporary discourses of hate and radicalism across space and genres. Philadelphia: John Benjamins. 2017. p. 13-39. (Benjamins Current Topics). doi: 10.1075/bct.93

Author

Wodak, Ruth Emily. / Saying the unsayable : denying the Holocaust in media debates in Austria and the UK. Contemporary discourses of hate and radicalism across space and genres. editor / Monika Kopytowska. Philadelphia : John Benjamins, 2017. pp. 13-39 (Benjamins Current Topics).

Bibtex

@inbook{5722a3d66aae4146bfb0c9a765ddc0b1,
title = "Saying the unsayable: denying the Holocaust in media debates in Austria and the UK",
abstract = "After 1945 and the end of WWII, denying the Holocaust became an explicit taboo in most European countries. More specifically, in Austria, denying the Holocaust in public implies legal consequences: the so-called Verbotsgesetz persecutes any public utterances which even insinuate National Socialist ideology (utterances, symbols, songs, images) and the Holocaust denial. Naturally, it remains difficult for the courts to substantiate any accusations and to prove that somebody has actually uttered Holocaust denial if the meanings are only implied, inferred, or alluded to. Thus, in spite of such explicit sanctions, politicians of the far-right have found many coded and implicit discursive-pragmatic practices and devices of denying the Holocaust, even during parliamentary debates and official speeches. In this chapter, I compare the “discourses about Holocaust denial” in Austria and the UK, in two case studies: the first one relates to the controversy about some utterances of Barbara Rosenkranz who stood as candidate of the Austrian Freedom Party (FP{\"O}) for election to Austrian Presidency in April 2010. Secondly, I focus on the debates triggered by Nick Griffin from the British extreme right party BNP, in and after his appearance in the prominent BBC 1 weekly show Question Time, in 2009. I apply the Discourse-Historical Approach in CDA for the detailed analysis of such recurring debates and foreground the patterns of a globalised politics of denial.",
author = "Wodak, {Ruth Emily}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1075/bct.93",
language = "English",
series = "Benjamins Current Topics",
publisher = "John Benjamins",
pages = "13--39",
editor = "Monika Kopytowska",
booktitle = "Contemporary discourses of hate and radicalism across space and genres",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Saying the unsayable

T2 - denying the Holocaust in media debates in Austria and the UK

AU - Wodak, Ruth Emily

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - After 1945 and the end of WWII, denying the Holocaust became an explicit taboo in most European countries. More specifically, in Austria, denying the Holocaust in public implies legal consequences: the so-called Verbotsgesetz persecutes any public utterances which even insinuate National Socialist ideology (utterances, symbols, songs, images) and the Holocaust denial. Naturally, it remains difficult for the courts to substantiate any accusations and to prove that somebody has actually uttered Holocaust denial if the meanings are only implied, inferred, or alluded to. Thus, in spite of such explicit sanctions, politicians of the far-right have found many coded and implicit discursive-pragmatic practices and devices of denying the Holocaust, even during parliamentary debates and official speeches. In this chapter, I compare the “discourses about Holocaust denial” in Austria and the UK, in two case studies: the first one relates to the controversy about some utterances of Barbara Rosenkranz who stood as candidate of the Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ) for election to Austrian Presidency in April 2010. Secondly, I focus on the debates triggered by Nick Griffin from the British extreme right party BNP, in and after his appearance in the prominent BBC 1 weekly show Question Time, in 2009. I apply the Discourse-Historical Approach in CDA for the detailed analysis of such recurring debates and foreground the patterns of a globalised politics of denial.

AB - After 1945 and the end of WWII, denying the Holocaust became an explicit taboo in most European countries. More specifically, in Austria, denying the Holocaust in public implies legal consequences: the so-called Verbotsgesetz persecutes any public utterances which even insinuate National Socialist ideology (utterances, symbols, songs, images) and the Holocaust denial. Naturally, it remains difficult for the courts to substantiate any accusations and to prove that somebody has actually uttered Holocaust denial if the meanings are only implied, inferred, or alluded to. Thus, in spite of such explicit sanctions, politicians of the far-right have found many coded and implicit discursive-pragmatic practices and devices of denying the Holocaust, even during parliamentary debates and official speeches. In this chapter, I compare the “discourses about Holocaust denial” in Austria and the UK, in two case studies: the first one relates to the controversy about some utterances of Barbara Rosenkranz who stood as candidate of the Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ) for election to Austrian Presidency in April 2010. Secondly, I focus on the debates triggered by Nick Griffin from the British extreme right party BNP, in and after his appearance in the prominent BBC 1 weekly show Question Time, in 2009. I apply the Discourse-Historical Approach in CDA for the detailed analysis of such recurring debates and foreground the patterns of a globalised politics of denial.

U2 - 10.1075/bct.93

DO - 10.1075/bct.93

M3 - Chapter

T3 - Benjamins Current Topics

SP - 13

EP - 39

BT - Contemporary discourses of hate and radicalism across space and genres

A2 - Kopytowska, Monika

PB - John Benjamins

CY - Philadelphia

ER -