03223nam 22006971 450 991097276860332120150529104811.09781472570918147257091X978147421983914742198379781472570901147257090110.5040/9781474219839(CKB)3710000000498227(EBL)4195942(SSID)ssj0001571128(PQKBManifestationID)16221082(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001571128(PQKBWorkID)12469182(PQKB)10638782(MiAaPQ)EBC4195942(OCoLC)925381601(UtOrBLW)bpp09259535(UtOrBLW)BP9781474219839BC(EXLCZ)99371000000049822720151012d2015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrRepresentation of the British suffrage movement /Kat GuptaLondon ;New York :Bloomsbury Academic,2015.1 online resource (289 p.)Corpus and discourseDescription based upon print version of record.9781350036666 1350036668 9781472570895 1472570898 Includes bibliographical references and index.Machine generated contents note: -- 1. Linguistic Approaches to Historical Data -- 2. Different Methodologies -- 3. Suffragists, Militants and Direct Action -- 4. The Role of Suggestive Placement -- 5. Public figure and Private Nuisance: Emily Wilding Davison -- 6. The Suffrage Movement in 'Letters To The Editor' -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index."Focussing on The Times, this monograph uses corpus linguistics to examine how suffrage campaigners' different ideologies were conflated in the newspaper over a crucial time period for the movement - 1908 to 1914, leading up to the Representation of the People Act in 1918. Looking particularly at representations of suffrage campaigners' support of or opposition to military action, Gupta uses a range of methodological approaches drawn from corpus linguistics, discourse analysis and CDA. These include: collocation analysis, examination of consistent significant collocates and van Leeuwen's taxonomy of social actors. The book offers an innovative insight into contemporary public understanding of the suffrage campaign with implications for researchers examining large, complex protest movements."--Bloomsbury Publishing.Corpus and discourse.Research in corpus and discourse.Corpora (Linguistics)LinguisticsMethodologySuffrageGreat BritainHistorylinguisticsCorpora (Linguistics)LinguisticsMethodology.SuffrageHistory.324.6/230941LAN009000bisacshGupta Kat1796014UtOrBLWUtOrBLWBOOK9910972768603321Representation of the British suffrage movement4337567UNINA06316nam 2200901Ia 450 991095691180332120200520144314.0978128389525512838952509789027272973902727297210.1075/dapsac.47(CKB)2550000000711177(EBL)1079721(OCoLC)823388427(SSID)ssj0000784463(PQKBManifestationID)12308766(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000784463(PQKBWorkID)10763023(PQKB)11251495(MiAaPQ)EBC1079721(Au-PeEL)EBL1079721(CaPaEBR)ebr10631234(CaONFJC)MIL420775(DE-B1597)721549(DE-B1597)9789027272973(EXLCZ)99255000000071117720120829d2012 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrTransforming national holidays identity discourse in the west and south Slavic countries, 1985-2010 /edited by Ljiljana Saric, Karen Gammelgaard, Kjetil Ra Hauge1st ed.Amsterdam ;Philadelphia John Benjamins Pub. Co.20121 online resource (328 p.)Discourse approaches to politics, society and culture ;v. 47Description based upon print version of record.9789027206381 9027206384 Includes bibliographical references and index.Transforming National Holidays; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Contributors; Acknowledgements; Preface; Organization of this volume; Discursive construction of national holidays in West and South Slavic countries after the fall of co; 1. National holidays as sites of transformation; 2. Terminology; 3. National holidays in official discourse; 4. National holidays and collective memory; 5. Underlying events; 6. Methodologies; Analyses; 1. Collective memory and media genres: Serbian Statehood Day 2002-2010; 1. Introduction and background2. Collective memory and Serbian Statehood Day 3. Analysis of media texts; 4. Conclusions; Primary sources; 2. The quest for a proper Bulgarian national holiday; 1. Introduction; 2. Day of Bulgaria's Liberation from the Ottoman Yoke, 3 March; 3. Day of Bulgarian Enlightenment and Slavic Literacy, 24 May; 4. Day of Unification, 6 September; 5. Day of Bulgaria's Independence, 22 September; 6. Other dates; 7. Conclusion; Primary sources; 3. The multiple symbolism of 3 May in Poland after the fall of communism; 1. Introduction2. Using the symbolism of the Constitution of 3 May: Three presidential discourses 3. The spirituality of the nation: Ecclesial 3 May discourse; 4. Conclusion; Primary sources; 4. "Dan skuplji vijeka," 'A day more precious than a century': Constructing Montenegrin identity by; 1. Introduction; 2. Background; 3. Theoretical and methodological frameworks; 4. Analyzing Pobjeda's construction of Independence Day; 5. Đukanović's construction of Montenegrin identity in two interviews; 6. To be continued5. Croatia in search of a national day: Front-page presentations of national-day celebrations, 1988-1. Introduction and background: Underlying events and controversies of national days as state symbol; 2. Analysis: Categories and premises; 3. Concluding remarks; Primary sources; 6. Contested pasts, contested red-letter days: Antifascist commemorations and ethnic identities in p; 1. Introduction; 2. Reconstructing the past: Independent Croatia and the post-communist transition; 3. Parallel commemorations, contested pasts; 4. Nation states and identity in commemorative speeches; 5. ConclusionPrimary sources 7. Commemorating the Warsaw Uprising of 1 August 1944: International relational aspects of commemora; 1. Introduction: 1 August as a key event in Polish history; 2. The development of the commemoration of 1 August in Poland; 3. The international commemorations of the Warsaw Uprising; 4. Concluding remarks; Primary sources; 8. Ilinden: Linking a Macedonian past, present and future; 1. Introduction; 2. A third Ilinden? (1990-1995); 3. Ethnic crisis (2001); 4. Bucharest and beyond (2008 onwards); 5. Conclusion; Primary sources9. Slovak national identity as articulated in the homilies of a religious holidayThis chapter examines one of Poland's most influential newspapers, Gazeta Wyborcza, and its front-page coverage of what is arguably the country's most popular national holiday, Independence Day. Specific attention is given to how Gazeta's writers discursively constructed a Polishness compatible with European values, both before and after the country's EU admission. Within the newspaper's Euro-Polish identity project, they reinforced the idea of a common past, present, and future, while introducing a concept of European supranationalism that, however, did not replace but instead served to complDiscourse Approaches to Politics, Society and CultureSlavic languagesPolitical aspectsSlavsEthnic identityDiscourse analysisPolitical aspectsSlavic countriesHolidaysSlavic countriesNationalismSlavic countriesNationalism and literatureSlavic countriesSociolinguisticsSlavic countriesSlavic countriesSocial life and customs20th centurySlavic countriesSocial life and customs21st centurySlavic languagesPolitical aspects.SlavsEthnic identity.Discourse analysisPolitical aspectsHolidaysNationalismNationalism and literatureSociolinguistics394.269496LB 48269rvkSaric Ljiljana481323Gammelgaard Karen1801017Hauge Kjetil Ra1945-1801018MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910956911803321Transforming national holidays4346046UNINA