Available Formats
Voice in Political Discourse: Castro, Chavez, Bush and their Strategic Use of Language
By (Author) Dr Antonio Reyes
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Continuum Publishing Corporation
13th October 2011
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political science and theory
320.014
Hardback
208
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
468g
Politicians enact three main roles in political discourse - narrator, interlocutor and character - to achieve specific goals. This book explains these roles and how they constitute discursive strategies, correlating with political aims. In short: politicians evoke voices in discourse to strategically position themselves in relation to social actors and events. The book describes these strategies and analyzes the manner in which they are employed by three very different politicians - Fidel Castro, Hugo Chavez and George W. Bush. The roles are studied cross-culturally and from different ideological backgrounds. This book explains how political ideologies are constructed, defined and redefined by linguistic means, showing specific ways in which politicians manipulate language to achieve the goals on their political agenda. It applies new methodological approaches to the analysis of political discourse and also contributes to the sparse literature on political discourse analysis of Spanish-speaking politicians.
Antonio Reyes draws on complementary interdisciplinary methodologies to introduce a diverse academic audience to three roles enacted by international politicians ... the book is a useful and interesting case-study approach to analyzing international political discourses. -- T.M. Linda Scholz, Eastern Illinois University, USA * New West Indian Guide *
Antonio Reyes is Assistant Professor in the Department of Romance Languages at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia, USA.