Product Description
The authors of this edited volume focus on the emergence of populist discourses, coming from movements or parties from Romance-speaking countries in Europe and in Latin America. By combining linguistics, social and political sciences in a discourse analytical approach, the sixteen papers enlighten the mechanisms behind populist discourses yielding from different socio-cultural and political contexts. The common denominator of the studies is the focus on the discursive and rhetorical characteristics of recently emerged movements of populism in both continents. Investigating expressions of these political movements is highly relevant in today’s society, where the growing number of populist discourses has become a preeminent issue, alongside people’s increasing insecurity regarding future political and environmental challenges. The primary audience of this volume are researchers working in the fields of political discourse analysis; however, this book may benefit anybody with interest in language in politics.
About the Author
Françoise Sullet-Nylander is a Professor of French Language and Linguistics at the Department of Romance Studies and Classics at Stockholm University. Since her doctoral thesis (1998), Le Titre de presse: analyses syntaxique, pragmatique et rhétorique, she has published a number of scientific articles focusing on polyphony, reported speech, rephrasing and wordplay in journalistic texts. She has also co-edited several books: Le Français parlé des médias (2007), La Linguistique dans tous les sens (2011), Discours rapporté, genre(s) et médias (2014), and Le discours rapporté : une question de genre ? (2015). Her current research deals with linguistic and discursive aspects of political debates during the French presidential elections (1974-2017). She is currently conducting an interdisciplinary research project on political discourses in Romance-speaking countries (ROMPOL, Stockholm University) and is a member of the research project 'Language and Power' at Stockholm University. ORCID: https://orcid.org/000-0002-9120-728X.
María Bernal is an Associate Professor and Lecturer of Spanish Linguistics at Stockholm University, Sweden, and a member of the EDICE Programme, which focuses on the study of linguistic (im)politeness. Her research interests are interactional pragmatics, conversation, and discourse analysis, mainly from a sociopragmatic perspective and through oral corpora (Spanish colloquial conversations, courtroom interactions, political discourse, etc.). Her work has appeared in journals such as Pragmatics and Journal of Spanish Language Teaching. She is the co-editor (with Diana Bravo) of Perspectivas sociopragmáticas y socioculturales del análisis del discurso, Buenos Aires, Dunken, 2015. She is currently engaged in a research project devoted to political discourses in Romance-speaking countries (ROMPOL, Stockholm University) and in a project investigating the communication on gender equality between institutions and citizens. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9231-9494.
Christophe Premat is an Associate Professor in French with a major specialization in Cultural Studies at Stockholm University. He is a member of the editorial board of the review Sens Public, an international web journal of social sciences. His current research focuses on the perception of participatory processes in the political discourse of French-speaking elites, the analysis of memory debates in France, and discourse analysis. He recently published a book on the institutionalization of Francophonie organization (Pour une généalogie critique de la Francophonie, Stockholm University Press, 2018) and, in 2015, co-edited a handbook on French-German relations, Handwörterbuch der deutsch-französischen Beziehungen (Nomos). He is part of the research project analyzing the political discourses in Romance-speaking countries (ROMPOL, Stockholm University) and the research project 'Language and Power' (S
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