
Discourse and Human Rights Violations
John Benjamins Publishing Co
Published on 6. April 2007
Book
Hardback
142 pages
978-90-272-2235-0 (ISBN)
Description
First published as a Special Issue of the Journal of Language and Politics 5:1 (2006), this collection of papers focuses, from a number of different disciplinary perspectives, on aspects of language and communication in official processes of dealing with traumatic pasts. It is a text that belongs to the genre of talking about pain, about state violence, about uncovering suppressed truths. Linguists and a number of other social scientists investigate discourses, mostly ones generated during hearings of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), scrutinizing them for how trauma is articulated and sometimes overcome, for how confrontational discourses are publicly managed, for how, after gross human rights violations, reconciliation can be mediated. Language is viewed as an instrument of confronting a traumatic past, of negotiating conflict, and of initiating processes of healing for individuals as well as in communities.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Amsterdam
Netherlands
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 245 mm
Width: 164 mm
Weight
440 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-272-2235-0 (9789027222350)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Christine Anthonissen | Jan Blommaert
Discourse and Human Rights Violations
E-Book
04/2007
1st Edition
John Benjamins Publishing Company
€98.99
Available for download
Persons
Content
1. About the Authors; 2. Articles; 3. The language of remembering and forgetting (by Anthonissen, Christine); 4. The debate on truth and reconciliation: A survey of literature on the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (by Verdoolaege, Annelies); 5. Narrative inequality in the TRC hearings: On the hearability of hidden transcripts (by Blommaert, Jan); 6. Critical discourse analysis as an analytic tool in considering selected, prominent features of TRC testimonies (by Anthonissen, Christine); 7. South African Novelists and the Grand Narrative of Apartheid (by Gagiano, Annie); 8. Linguistic Bearings and Testimonial Practices (by Ross, Fiona); 9. History in the making/The making of history: The 'German Wehrmacht' in collective and individual memories in Austria (by Wodak, Ruth)