The MANIPULATIVE NATURE OF MEDIA-POLITICAL DISCOURSE

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46991/AFA/2022.18.1.009

Keywords:

manipulation, discourse, political discourse, lexical level of the language, news, information bias

Abstract

At the present moment, media saturation provides us with a reasonably objective criterion available for examination.  In a loose sense, the Internet has become a parallel reality where people live to pursue constantly updated news at the repeated click of a button, which maintains the reader's immediate interest in every sense of the word.  In perusing news articles, placing a particular emphasis on their manipulative nature, we can plunge deeply into such language layers as that of the lexical, grammatical, stylistic, etc.  In this paper we place our central interest on the lexical aspect of language manipulation because words are the foundation of meaning in speech.  A functional-communicative view of the lexical material of the discourse of news articles reveals the effect of a journalist's choice and arrangement of words on the reported news and how the manipulative potential of language unfolds.

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References

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News writing fundamentals. (2014). George Mason University Writing Center. Retrieved February 2, 2022.

Pajunen, J. (2008). Linguistic analysis of newspaper discourse in theory and practice, (Graduation Thesis, University of Tampere, Finland) Retrieved February 10, 2022.

van Dijk, T. (1988 a). News as discourse. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Laurence Erlbaum Associates.

Sources of Data

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Parker N., & Starkey J. (2022, Februrary 15). HIGH ALERT Russia set to invade Ukraine at any time with massive missile blitz and 200,000 troops, US intelligence claims. The Sun. Retrieved February 19, 2022.

Trump, D. (2021, August 26). Donald Trump speech transcript: Kabul bombing “would not have happened if I were your president”. Rev. Retrieved February 15, 2022.

Tugendhat, T. (2022, February 15). BAD VLAD Inside the paranoid mind of Vladimir Putin, the trigger-happy KGB bully who acts like an ‘ageing gangster from Sopranos’. The Sun. Retrieved February 17, 2022.

Dictionaries and Encyclopedias

Double speak. (n.d.). In Merriam Webster Dictionary. Retrieved February 1, 2022 from https://merriam-webster.com

Paranoid. (n.d.). In Cambridge Dictionary. Retrieved February 3, 2022 from https://dictionary.cambridge.org

Puppet. (n.d.). In Oxford Learner’s Dictionary. Retrieved January 30, 2022 from www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/

Trigger-happy. (n.d.). In Merriam Webster Dictionary. Retrieved February 1, 2022 from https://merriam-webster.com

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Published

2022-06-01

How to Cite

Gasparyan, S., & Harutyunyan, R. (2022). The MANIPULATIVE NATURE OF MEDIA-POLITICAL DISCOURSE. Armenian Folia Anglistika, 18(1 (25), 9–22. https://doi.org/10.46991/AFA/2022.18.1.009

Issue

Section

Linguistics