“…This shift is noted in works by Hundsnurscher (1992) and Weigand (see, for instance, 2010Weigand (see, for instance, , 2017Weigand (see, for instance, , 2018 dealing with a problem of dialogic character of natural language use.…”
The paper considers political mass media discourse as a persuasive dialogue in which a journalist makes his interlocutors accept a certain point of view. The desired mental reaction on the part of interlocutors can only be achieved through careful choice of ways of persuasion and especially linguistic means often influencing effectively the emotional sphere. The persuasion can be subject to ideological aims thus representing a definite object as positive or negative. The paper claims that such object as the image of state can have opposite assessment in different periods of time and focuses on linguistic means of N. B. Boeva-Omelechko, et al.
“…This shift is noted in works by Hundsnurscher (1992) and Weigand (see, for instance, 2010Weigand (see, for instance, , 2017Weigand (see, for instance, , 2018 dealing with a problem of dialogic character of natural language use.…”
The paper considers political mass media discourse as a persuasive dialogue in which a journalist makes his interlocutors accept a certain point of view. The desired mental reaction on the part of interlocutors can only be achieved through careful choice of ways of persuasion and especially linguistic means often influencing effectively the emotional sphere. The persuasion can be subject to ideological aims thus representing a definite object as positive or negative. The paper claims that such object as the image of state can have opposite assessment in different periods of time and focuses on linguistic means of N. B. Boeva-Omelechko, et al.
“…e.g. Weigand 1989, 1991, 1995, Hundsnurscher 1992, Fritz 1982? Why do we have to ignore that even in newspaper texts there is an author acting and readers reacting dialogically?…”
“…All these dialogically oriented acts have to be defined in a dialogic speech act taxonomy as in Weigand (1989aWeigand ( , 1991. Rules of dialogic sequences have been described by Hundsnurscher (1980Hundsnurscher ( , 1992 in a model called 'dialogue grammar' and by others (cf . Franke 1990;Weigand 1994a).…”
Section: Speech Acts and Semantic Theorymentioning
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