Ha sido reseñado en:
Melike Akkaraca Kose (res.)
Ibérica: Revista de la Asociación Europea de Lenguas para Fines Específicos ( AELFE ), ISSN-e 2340-2784, ISSN 1139-7241, Nº. 41, 2021, págs. 181-185
Discourse Studies in Public Communication: Eliecer Crespo-Fernández, ed. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2021
Miscelánea: A journal of english and american studies, ISSN 1137-6368, Nº 67, 2023, págs. 215-219
The collection of articles in Discourse Studies in Public Communication illustrates that public communication is a fascinating, evidence-based storehouse for research in discourse analysis. The contributions to this volume — in the spheres of political rhetoric, gender and sexuality, and corporate and academic communication — provide good evidence of contemporary social structure, social phenomena, and social issues. In this way, following the parameters of different analytical frameworks (critical discourse analysis, cognitive metaphor theory, appraisal theory, multimodality, etc.), the contributors address not only the linguistic aspects of texts but also, and more importantly, the cultural and cognitive dimensions of public communication in a range of real life communicative contexts and kinds of discourse. Although the volume is addressed, first and foremost, to readers with diverse interests in English linguistics, it may also prove valuable to scholars in other non-linguistic research fields like communication studies, social theory, political science, or psychology.
págs. 1-12
págs. 15-38
Political and journalistic discourse regarding the Catalan declaration of independence: A critical analysis
págs. 39-58
National vs international cartoons depecting Catalonia's independence process in the press: A critical multimodal metaphor approach
págs. 59-81
págs. 83-102
Persuasive discourse in Daniel Defo'e political essays: Boosting and hedging
págs. 103-127
págs. 129-148
It all comes down to sex: Metaphorical animalisation in reggaeton discourse
págs. 151-176
Cyberbullying and gender: exploring socially deviant behavioural practices among teenagers on Twitter
págs. 177-197
págs. 199-218
págs. 219-241
págs. 245-271
págs. 273-296
págs. 297-319
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