Political ideologies and identity in British newspaper discourse

Newspaper editorials have a special role within the pages of the press, as they are openly persuasive and there is less emphasis on objectivity (Lee and Lin, 2006). They represent the participation of the newspaper in public debate (Le, 2003) and are sites where the ideological stances of a newspap...

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Main Author: Hardman, Dean
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10601/
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author Hardman, Dean
author_facet Hardman, Dean
author_sort Hardman, Dean
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Newspaper editorials have a special role within the pages of the press, as they are openly persuasive and there is less emphasis on objectivity (Lee and Lin, 2006). They represent the participation of the newspaper in public debate (Le, 2003) and are sites where the ideological stances of a newspaper can often be found (Hackett and Zhao, 1994). Editorials frequently focus upon issues surrounding national politics, often discussing political leaders and the decisions taken by leading politicians. This thesis investigates four British newspapers, The Guardian, The Telegraph, the Daily Mail and the Mirror, in order to assess the different ways in which identities have been constructed over the past thirty-five years by the newspapers for the political leaders featured in the editorials. The thesis utilises a novel analytical framework that modifies Critical Discourse Analysis by incorporating theories of performed identities and metaphor with a "Discourse Historical" approach to critical analysis. The creation of identities, alongside the stance adopted towards individuals and political issues, are found to both help create an ideological identity for the newspaper itself while simultaneously encouraging readers to conceptualise events in such a way that serves the ideology in question. The findings show a series of strategies used by newspapers to evaluate political leaders and their decisions in ways that serve the newspapers' ideologies. Differences in the linguistic strategies used to reflect stance in tabloid newspapers when compared to broadsheet newspapers are also found.
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spelling nottingham-106012025-02-28T11:08:54Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10601/ Political ideologies and identity in British newspaper discourse Hardman, Dean Newspaper editorials have a special role within the pages of the press, as they are openly persuasive and there is less emphasis on objectivity (Lee and Lin, 2006). They represent the participation of the newspaper in public debate (Le, 2003) and are sites where the ideological stances of a newspaper can often be found (Hackett and Zhao, 1994). Editorials frequently focus upon issues surrounding national politics, often discussing political leaders and the decisions taken by leading politicians. This thesis investigates four British newspapers, The Guardian, The Telegraph, the Daily Mail and the Mirror, in order to assess the different ways in which identities have been constructed over the past thirty-five years by the newspapers for the political leaders featured in the editorials. The thesis utilises a novel analytical framework that modifies Critical Discourse Analysis by incorporating theories of performed identities and metaphor with a "Discourse Historical" approach to critical analysis. The creation of identities, alongside the stance adopted towards individuals and political issues, are found to both help create an ideological identity for the newspaper itself while simultaneously encouraging readers to conceptualise events in such a way that serves the ideology in question. The findings show a series of strategies used by newspapers to evaluate political leaders and their decisions in ways that serve the newspapers' ideologies. Differences in the linguistic strategies used to reflect stance in tabloid newspapers when compared to broadsheet newspapers are also found. 2008 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10601/1/Political_Ideology_and_Identity_in_British_Newspaper_Discourse.pdf Hardman, Dean (2008) Political ideologies and identity in British newspaper discourse. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Discourse Analysis Critical Discourse Analysis Media Discourse Media Newspapers Ideology Identity Sociolinguistics Political Discourse Political Ideology
spellingShingle Discourse Analysis
Critical Discourse Analysis
Media Discourse
Media
Newspapers
Ideology
Identity
Sociolinguistics
Political Discourse
Political Ideology
Hardman, Dean
Political ideologies and identity in British newspaper discourse
title Political ideologies and identity in British newspaper discourse
title_full Political ideologies and identity in British newspaper discourse
title_fullStr Political ideologies and identity in British newspaper discourse
title_full_unstemmed Political ideologies and identity in British newspaper discourse
title_short Political ideologies and identity in British newspaper discourse
title_sort political ideologies and identity in british newspaper discourse
topic Discourse Analysis
Critical Discourse Analysis
Media Discourse
Media
Newspapers
Ideology
Identity
Sociolinguistics
Political Discourse
Political Ideology
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10601/