
What is Discourse Analysis?
Stephanie Taylor(Author)
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published on 20. June 2013
Book
Paperback/Softback
128 pages
978-1-84966-903-0 (ISBN)
Description
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com.
What is Discourse Analysis? is an accessible introduction to an empirical research approach which is widely used in the social sciences and related disciplines.
This book explores the idea of how meaning is socially constructed and how 'talk' and text can be interpreted. The challenges of discourse analysis are outlined as well as helpful ways to approach them - from finding the right starting point, processing and interpreting data through to building an argument.
Discourse analysts work with language data, including talk, documents and broadcast material. Researchers in different traditions study interactions and social practices, meaning-making and larger meaning systems, and contests and conflicts around collective identities, social norms and subjectification.
What is Discourse Analysis? addresses new researchers and other academics interested in language and its associated practices. The book outlines the history of discourse analysis, its key concepts and theorists and its uses and challenges. Discussions of published studies illustrate the use of the approach to investigate a range of research topics, such as gender, health and national identities. The book also addresses the practical aspects of discourse analysis, providing clear guidance on data collection and data processing, including transcription and selection.
Covering important topics, What is Discourse Analysis? draws from recent articles to show how discourse analysis works in action. Common questions about discourse analysis are presented in a lively and accessible Q&A format. This book will be an essential resource for all researchers working with discourse analysis.
What is Discourse Analysis? is an accessible introduction to an empirical research approach which is widely used in the social sciences and related disciplines.
This book explores the idea of how meaning is socially constructed and how 'talk' and text can be interpreted. The challenges of discourse analysis are outlined as well as helpful ways to approach them - from finding the right starting point, processing and interpreting data through to building an argument.
Discourse analysts work with language data, including talk, documents and broadcast material. Researchers in different traditions study interactions and social practices, meaning-making and larger meaning systems, and contests and conflicts around collective identities, social norms and subjectification.
What is Discourse Analysis? addresses new researchers and other academics interested in language and its associated practices. The book outlines the history of discourse analysis, its key concepts and theorists and its uses and challenges. Discussions of published studies illustrate the use of the approach to investigate a range of research topics, such as gender, health and national identities. The book also addresses the practical aspects of discourse analysis, providing clear guidance on data collection and data processing, including transcription and selection.
Covering important topics, What is Discourse Analysis? draws from recent articles to show how discourse analysis works in action. Common questions about discourse analysis are presented in a lively and accessible Q&A format. This book will be an essential resource for all researchers working with discourse analysis.
Reviews / Votes
[This book] offers a coherent and wide-ranging introduction to the major developments in discourse analysis, from the very beginning to the present day ... Detailed, coherent and accessible ... an excellent resource, particularly for postgraduate students who want to pursue discourse analysis further. -- Yijin Wu and Wen Ma, Shandong University, P. R. China * Discourse Studies *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
Primary & secondary/elementary & high school
College/higher education
Product notice
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 7 mm
Weight
169 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-84966-903-0 (9781849669030)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Stephanie Taylor
What is Discourse Analysis?
E-Book
06/2013
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Academic
€23.99
Available for download
Person
Stephanie Taylor is Senior Lecturer in Psychology in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the Open Unviersity. In her current post she has produced and presented popular undergraduate and postgraduate modules on social sciences, social psychology and research methods, including ethnography and discourse analysis. Her own research, on identity and processes of identification and subjectification, is interdisciplinary, with a strong focus on methodology. Her most recent books are Narratives of Identity and Place (2009) and the two introductory texts Making Social Lives and Exploring Social Lives, co-edited with S.Hinchliffe, J.Clarke and S. Bromley (2009).
Content
Chapter 1: Introduction
Section 1.1: What is discourse analysis?
Section 1.2: Key terms
Chapter 2: An academic history of discourse analysis
Chapter 3: Three examples of discourse analysis
Section 3.1: The construction of prejudice
Section 3.2: Gender in talk
Section 3.3: Discourses of health and illness
Chapter 4: The usefulness of discourse analysis for social science researchers Section 4.1: Reasons to use discourse analysis and language data
Section 4.2: Different forms of data Section
Section 4.3: Obtaining data
Chapter 5: The challenges of discourse analysis
Chapter 6: Criticisms of discourse analysis
Chapter 7: Summary
Index
Section 1.1: What is discourse analysis?
Section 1.2: Key terms
Chapter 2: An academic history of discourse analysis
Chapter 3: Three examples of discourse analysis
Section 3.1: The construction of prejudice
Section 3.2: Gender in talk
Section 3.3: Discourses of health and illness
Chapter 4: The usefulness of discourse analysis for social science researchers Section 4.1: Reasons to use discourse analysis and language data
Section 4.2: Different forms of data Section
Section 4.3: Obtaining data
Chapter 5: The challenges of discourse analysis
Chapter 6: Criticisms of discourse analysis
Chapter 7: Summary
Index