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Winds of War: Epistemic and effective control in political discourse on war
Author(s) -
Juana Isabel Marín Arrese
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
cultura, lenguaje y representación/cultura, lenguaje y representación
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.127
H-Index - 4
eISSN - 2340-4981
pISSN - 1697-7750
DOI - 10.6035/clr.5858
Subject(s) - opposition (politics) , proposition , epistemology , politics , control (management) , george (robot) , sociology , political science , law , philosophy , management , computer science , economics , artificial intelligence
This paper explores two key domains of speaker’s stance in discourse: epistemic and effective stance (Marín-Arrese 2011, 2015, 2021). The framework draws on Langacker’s (2009, 2013) distinction between the effective and the epistemic level in the grammar, and the systematic opposition thereof between striving for control of relations at the level of reality and control of conceptions of reality. Epistemic strategies pertain to the epistemic legitimisation of assertions, by providing epistemic support and epistemic justification for the proposition (Boye 2012). Effective control is aimed at the legitimisation of actions and plans of action. The joint deployment of epistemic and effective stance acts effects a strategy of combined control over hearers/readers’ acceptance of conceptions of reality and of plans of action. This paper studies the strategic use of these resources in the discourse of war and presents a case study on their use by two politicians, President George Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair, in political speeches and statements during the build-up to the second Iraq war. Results indicate significant qualitative and quantitative differences in the preferred stance strategies in the discourse of the two politicians.

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