TY - BOOK AU - Benke,Gertraud AU - Billig,Michael AU - Britain,David AU - Chilton,Paul A. AU - Dedaic,Mirjana N. AU - Dedaić,Mirjana N. AU - Dickason,Renée AU - Karyolemou,Marilena AU - Langston,Keith AU - Matsumoto,Kazuko AU - Nelson,Daniel N. AU - Osam,Kweku AU - Peterson,Mark Allen AU - Peti-Stantić,Anita AU - Pollak,Alexander AU - Prosise,Theodore O. AU - Ruud,Kathryn AU - Scollon,Suzanne Wong AU - Shinzato,Rumiko AU - Tucker,Robert E. AU - Wodak,Ruth TI - At War with Words T2 - Language, Power and Social Process [LPSP] , SN - 9783110176490 AV - P119.3 .A86 2003eb U1 - 306.44 21 PY - 2012///] CY - Berlin, Boston : PB - De Gruyter Mouton, KW - Language and culture KW - Language and languages KW - Political aspects KW - War and society KW - Gesprächsanalyse KW - Krieg KW - Politik KW - Sprachgebrauch KW - LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General KW - bisacsh N1 - i-vi --; Preface: Language as forms of death --; Contents --; Notes on contributors --; Introduction: A peace of word --; I. War discourse --; Liberal parasites and other creepers: Rush Limbaugh, Ken Hamblin, and the discursive construction of group identities --; Threat or business as usual? A multimodal, intertextual analysis of a political statement --; Deixis and distance: President Clinton’s justification of intervention in Kosovo --; The language of atomic science and atomic conflict: Exploring the limits of symbolic representation --; The politics of discontent: A discourse analysis of texts of the Reform Movement in Ghana --; When guilt becomes a foreign country: Guilt and responsibility in Austrian postwar media representations of the Second World War --; Remembering and forgetting: The discursive construction of generational memories --; II. Language wars --; Attitudes towards linguistic purism in Croatia: Evaluating efforts at language reform --; Wars, politics, and language: A case study of the Okinawan language --; Language choice and cultural hegemony: Linguistic symbols of domination and resistance in Palau --; “Keep your language and I’ll keep mine”: Politics, language and the construction of identities in Cyprus --; Advertising for peace as political communication --; American warriors speaking American: The metapragmatics of performance in the nation state --; Conclusion: Word peace --; Name index --; Subject index; restricted access; Issued also in print N2 - In a new era of global conflict involving non-state actors, At War with Words offers a provocative perspective on the role of language in the genesis, conduct and consequence of mass violence. Sociolinguistics meets political science and communication studies in order to examine interdependence between armed conflict and language. As phenomena attributed only to humans, both armed conflict and language are visible on two axes: language as war discourse, and language as a social policy subject to change by the victorious. In this unique volume, internationally known contributors provide original data and new insights that illuminate roles of text and talk in creating identities of enemies, justifications for violence, and accompanying propaganda. Incorporating contexts from around the world, this collection's topics range from a radio talk show hosts' inflammatory rhetoric to the semantic poverty of the lexicon of mass destruction. The first eight chapters discuss war texts. How does language serve as a vehicle to incite, justify, and resolve an armed conflict? Case studies from the US to China, and from Austria to Ghana detail such a progression to, through, and from war. The book's second part reflects the understanding of language as a symbol of power achieved by a victorious side in war. Five chapters discuss cases from Okinawa, Croatia, Cyprus, Palau, and Northern Ireland. Edited by a sociolinguist and a political scientist, At War with Words includes chapters by Michael Billig, Paul Chilton, Ruth Wodak and a dozen other prominent linguists and communications scholars. This book will be of interest to linguists, media scholars and political scientists, but is also accessible to any reader interested in language and war. Teachers will find particular chapters useful as course material in discourse analysis, language policy, war and peace studies, conflict resolution, mass communication, and other related disciplines UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110897715 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783110897715 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9783110897715/original ER -