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Archive | 2013

The discursive construction of the Scots language : education, politics and everyday life

Johann Wolfgang Unger

This monograph is about how the Scots language is discursively constructed, both from ‘above’ (through texts such as educational policies, debates in parliament and official websites) and from ‘below’ (in focus group discussions among Scottish people). It uses the interdisciplinary discourse-historical approach to critical discourse analysis to examine what discursive strategies are used in different texts, and also to investigate salient features of context. This allows a broader discussion of the role of this language in Scotland, and how different ways of constructing a language can percolate through society, appearing in both important, elite texts and discussions among ordinary people. It thus contributes to the body of knowledge about contemporary Scots, but also expands the range of possible applications for critical discourse analysis approaches.


European Journal of Cultural Studies | 2010

Legitimating inaction: Differing identity constructions of the Scots language

Johann Wolfgang Unger

The Scots language plays a key role in the political and cultural landscape of contemporary Scotland. From a discourse-historical perspective, this article explores how language ideologies about the Scots language are realized linguistically in a so-called ‘languages strategy’ drafted by the Scottish Executive, and in focus groups consisting of Scottish people. This article shows that although the decline of Scots is said to be a ‘tragedy’, focus group participants seem to reject the notion of Scots as a viable, contemporary language that can be used across a wide range of registers. The policy document also seems to construct Scots in very positive terms, but is shown to be unhelpful or potentially even damaging in the process of changing public attitudes to Scots.


Archive | 2016

Discursive approaches to language policy

Elisabeth Barakos; Johann Wolfgang Unger

This book brings together the fields of language policy and discourse studies from a multidisciplinary theoretical, methodological and empirical perspective. The chapters in this volume are written by international scholars active in the field of language policy and planning and discourse studies. The diverse research contexts range from education in Paraguay and Luxembourg via businesses in Wales to regional English language policies in Tajikistan. Readers are thereby invited to think critically about the mutual relationship between language policy and discourse in a range of social, political, economic and cultural spheres. Using approaches that draw on discourse-analytic, anthropological, ethnographic and critical sociolinguistic frameworks, the contributors in this collection explore and refine the ‘discursive’ and the ‘critical’ aspects of language policy as a multilayered, fluid, ideological, discursive and social process that can operate as a tool of social change as well as reinforcing established power structures and inequalities.


Archive | 2016

Introduction : why are discursive approaches to language policy necessary?

Elisabeth Barakos; Johann Wolfgang Unger

This volume is a series of explorations of language policy from a discursive perspective. Its chief aim is to systematically explore the interconnectedness of language policy and discourse through what we are terming ‘discursive approaches to language policy’ (DALP). We show that language policy is a multilayered phenomenon that is constituted and enacted in and through discourse (which is defined more closely in Sect. 1.2). Language policy is a fast-growing, vibrant, and interdisciplinary field of inquiry that offers a variety of theoretical frameworks, methodologies, analytic approaches, and empirical findings: the framing sections at the beginning of each part of this volume and the commentary at the end frame the discussion of developments in language policy and especially the role of DALP therein.


Palgrave Communications | 2016

Corrigendum: The interdisciplinarity of critical discourse studies research

Johann Wolfgang Unger

Correction to: Palgrave Communications (2016) 2, Article number: 15037. doi: 10.1057/palcomms.2015.37; Published 4 Feb 2016; Updated 5 Feb 2016 The following credit is now included in the legend to Figure 1. Reproduced by permission of SAGE Publications, London, Los Angeles, New Delhi and Singapore,from Wodak, Ruth & Meyer, Michael, Critical discourse studies: history, agenda, theory, and methodology, Copyright (© SAGE Publications, 2015).


Archive | 2009

The Discursive Construction of National Identity

Ruth Wodak; Rudolf De Cillia; Martin Reisigl; Karin Liebhart; Angelika Hirsch; Richard Mitten; Johann Wolfgang Unger


Archive | 2014

Researching Language and Social Media: A Student Guide

Ruth Page; David Barton; Johann Wolfgang Unger; Michele Zappavigna


Discourse, Context and Media | 2014

Exploring 'success' in digitally augmented activism: A triangulated approach to analyzing UK activist Twitter use

William Simm; Jon Whittle; Johann Wolfgang Unger


Methods of Critical Discourse Studies | 2016

Critical discourse studies and social media : power, resistance and critique in changing media ecologies

Majid KhosraviNik; Johann Wolfgang Unger


Qualitative Research | 2016

Critical Discourse Studies and Social Media Data

Johann Wolfgang Unger; Ruth Wodak; Majid KhosraviNik

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Michele Zappavigna

University of New South Wales

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