
Mediating Ideology in Text and Image
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- Mediating Ideology in Text and Image
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Preface
- Why another volume on ideology?
- References
- Images in/and news in a globalised world
- 1. Images and icons
- 2. Analyzing (ideologies) critically?
- 2.1. Text and context
- 2.2. Is CDA critical? The concepts of ``critic/al'' and ``ideology''
- 3. Perspectives
- Note
- References
- Media constructions of meaning
- Semiosis, ideology and mediation
- Two examples
- Mediation and ideology
- Critical Discourse Analysis
- Mediation and ideology
- The Romanian cases
- Notes
- References
- Evaluative semantics and ideological positioning in journalistic discourse
- Introduction
- Mechanisms of evaluative positioning
- Journalistic commentary and inscribed attitude
- `Hard news' and explicit attitudinal inscription
- Attitudinal tokens 1: Evoking positive/negative assessments via `informational' content
- Attitudinal tokens 2: Evaluative positioning via association and provocation
- Attitudinal associations
- Attribution and evaluative positioning
- Authorial endorsement
- Authorial distancing
- Evidential standing
- Concluding remarks
- References
- Identity and stance taking in news interviews
- Introduction
- Categories and identities in talk-in-interaction
- From `subjective' stance to `intersubjective' stance taking
- Conversation Analysis and news interviews
- Stance taking and the discourse-functional ``theory of stance''
- Stance taking as intersubjective and sequential activity
- Analysis
- Introducing categories in news interview openings
- Categorization as a resource for constructing an identity in a stance-taking sequence
- Summary
- Notes
- References
- Appendix - Transcription conventions
- De-naturalizing ideology
- The concept of presupposition
- Method, analysis and discussion of data
- Specific definite reference
- Restrictive relative clauses
- Premodifying adjectives
- The genitive
- Intertextuality
- Appraisal
- Engagement
- Conclusion
- References
- Understanding public discourse about violence and crime
- 1. Defining the problem
- 1.1. Background assumptions on critical literacy, domain-specificity and CDA
- 1.2. An overview of this paper
- 2. Crime news between self-defence, social criticism and entertainment
- 2.1. Crime news as narrative genre
- 2.2. Crime news and discourse on crime as modern gallows
- 2.3. Depiction of crime as social criticism
- 3. Different value systems and discourse on violent crime
- 3.1. Strict Father vs. Nurturant Parent morality (and other dichotomies)
- 3.2. Constructing the deviant as other
- 4. Evaluating contributions to debate
- 4.1. Monologism vs. dialogism
- 4.2. Dialogue and em involvement in discourse
- 4.3. Monological social criticism
- 4.4. Dialogical social criticism
- 5. Conclusions: Two directions for future work, plus a warning
- Notes
- References
- Resemiotized meaning
- From our plan to my promises
- Introduction
- Part one: Theory
- Politics
- The political newspaper advertisement
- Multimodal discourse analysis
- Part two: Analysis
- The presentation of the prime minister in the close-up photos
- The verbal presentation of the overall policy
- The co-articulation of verbal and visual elements
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Icons as ideology
- Notes
- References
- List of images
- Getting attention in the media
- Discourses, genres and layout - points of departure
- Data
- Five ways of getting attention
- Facts check and questions column
- The category of interview
- Conclusions
- References
- The big picture
- Materials
- Theoretical orientation
- Analysis of the Greek image
- The main headline: Immigrants ``slightly legal''
- Analysis of Australian image
- Image-verbiage relations
- Conclusion
- References
- Media texts
- News bulletin captions as ideological indices
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1. Statement of purpose
- 2. Setting the stage
- 2.1. Formal characteristics
- 3. Presentation and analysis of captions
- 3.1. Intertextuality
- 3.2. Metaphor
- 4. Conclusions
- Note
- References
- Index
- Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture
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