ABSTRACT

Text and Practices provides an essential introduction to the theory and practice of Critical Discourse Analysis. Using insights from this challenging new method of linguiistic analysis, the contributors to this text reveal the ways in whcih language can be used as a means of social control.
The essays in Text and Practices:
* demonstrate how critical discourse analysis can be applied to a variety of written and spoken texts
* deconstruct data from a range of contexts, countries and spheres
* expose hidden patterns of discrimination and inequalities of power
Texts and Practices, which includes specially commissioned papers from a range of distinguished authors, provides a state-of-the-art introduction to critical discourse analysis. As such it represents an important contribution to this developing field and an essential text for all advanced students of language, media and cultural studies.

part I|104 pages

Critical Discourse Theory

chapter 1|12 pages

On Critical Linguistics 1

chapter 2|17 pages

Representational Resources and the Production of Subjectivity

Questions for the Theoretical Development of Critical Discourse Analysis in a Multicultural Society

chapter 4|13 pages

Technologisation of Discourse

chapter 5|21 pages

Discourse, Power and Access

part II|166 pages

Texts and Practices: Critical Approaches

chapter 7|21 pages

Ethnic, Racial and Tribal

The Language of Racism?

chapter 8|16 pages

A Clause-Relational Analysis of Selected Dictionary Entries

Contrast and Compatibility in the Definitions of ‘Man' and ‘Woman’

chapter 9|13 pages

The Official Version

Audience Manipulation in Police Records of Interviews with Suspects

chapter 10|15 pages

Conflict Talk in a Psychiatric Discharge Interview

Struggling Between Personal and Official Footings

chapter 12|17 pages

‘Guilt Over Games Boys Play'

Coherence as a Focus for Examining the Constitution of Heterosexual Subjectivity on a Problem Page

chapter 13|19 pages

Barking up the Wrong Tree?

Male Hegemony, Discrimination Against Women and the Reporting of Bestiality in the Zimbabwean Press

chapter 14|21 pages

‘Women Who Pay for Sex. And Enjoy It'

Transgression Versus Morality in Women's Magazines