Date: 05-Aug-2005 From: Paul Peranteau <paulbenjamins.com> Subject: A New Agenda in (Critical) Discourse Analysis: Wodak, Chilton (Eds)
Title: A New Agenda in (Critical) Discourse Analysis
Subtitle: Theory, Methodology and Interdisciplinarity
Series Title: Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 13
Published: 2005
Publisher: John Benjamins
http://www.benjamins.com/
Editor: Ruth Wodak, Lancaster University
Editor: Paul Chilton, University of East Anglia
Hardback: ISBN: 1588116379 Pages: xiv,322 Price: U.S. $ 138.00
Hardback: ISBN: 9027227039 Pages: xiv,322 Price: Europe EURO 115.00
Abstract:
Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) has established itself over the past two decades as an area of academic activity in which scholars and students from many different disciplines are involved. It is a field that draws on social theory and aspects of linguistics in order to understand and challenge the discourses of our day. It is time for A New Agenda in the field. The present book is essential for anyone working broadly in the field of discourse analysis in the social sciences. The book includes often critical re-assessments of CDA's assumptions and methods, while proposing new route-maps for innovation. Practical analyses of major issues in discourse analysis are part of this agenda-setting volume.
Table of contents
Acknowledgements ix Preface Ruth Wodak xi-xii
PART I. Interdisciplinarity and (C)DA Three models of interdisciplinarity Theo van Leeuwen 3-18 Missing links in mainstream CDA: Modules, blends and the critical instinct Paul Chilton 19-51 Critical discourse analysis in transdisciplinary research Norman L. Fairclough 53-70 Contextual knowledge management in discourse production: A CDA perspective Teun A. van Dijk 71-100 Lighting the stove: Why habitus isn't enough for Critical Discourse Analysis Ron & Suzie Scollon 101-117
PART II. Implementing Interdisciplinarity Analyzing European Union discourses: Theories and applications Ruth Wodak and Gilbert Weiss 121-135 'European Identity Wanted!': On discursive and communicative dimensions of the European Convention Michal Krzyzanowski 137-163 Deliberation or 'mainstreaming'? Empirically researching the European Convention Florian Oberhuber 165-187 "It is not sufficient to have a moral basis, it has to be democratic too.": Constructing "Europe" in Swedish reports on the Austrian political situation in 2000 Christoph Bärenreuter 189-211 Language, psychotherapy and client change: An interdisciplinary perspective Peter Muntigl and Adam Horvath 213-239
PART III. Inside and Outside traditional disciplines Anthropology of institutions and discourse analysis: Looking into interdisciplinarity Irène Bellier 243-267 The role of a political identity code in defining the boundaries of public and private.: The example of latent antisemitism András Kovács 269-281 Social order and disorder: Institutions, policy paradigms and discourses: An interdisciplinary approach Tom R. Burns and Marcus Carson 283-309
Biographical Notes 311-314 Index 315-321
Linguistic Field(s):
Discourse Analysis
Pragmatics