
This article possibly contains original research.(November 2024) |
Discourse analysis (DA), or discourse studies, is an approach to the analysis of written, spoken, or sign language, including any significant semiotic event.[citation needed]
The objects of discourse analysis (discourse, writing, conversation, communicative event) are variously defined in terms of coherent sequences of sentences, propositions, speech, or turns-at-talk. Contrary to much of traditional linguistics, discourse analysts not only study language use 'beyond the sentence boundary' but also prefer to analyze 'naturally occurring' language use, not invented examples.Text linguistics is a closely related field. The essential difference between discourse analysis and text linguistics is that discourse analysis aims at revealing socio-psychological characteristics of a person/persons rather than text structure.
Discourse analysis has been taken up in a variety of disciplines in the humanities and social sciences, including linguistics, education, sociology, anthropology, social work, cognitive psychology, social psychology, area studies, cultural studies, international relations, human geography, environmental science, communication studies, biblical studies, public relations, argumentation studies, and translation studies, each of which is subject to its own assumptions, dimensions of analysis, and methodologies.[citation needed]
History
The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject.(December 2010) |
Early use of the term
There is ongoing discussion about whether Austria-born Leo Spitzer's Stilstudien (Style Studies) of 1928 is the earliest example of discourse analysis (DA).[citation needed]Michel Foucault translated it into French. However, the term first came into general use following the publication[citation needed] of a series of papers by Zellig Harris from 1952 reporting on work from which he developed transformational grammar in the late 1930s. Formally equivalent relations among the sentences of a coherent discourse are made explicit by using sentence transformations to put the text in a canonical form. Words and sentences with equivalent information then appear in the same column of an array.
This work progressed over the next four decades (see references) into a science of sublanguage analysis (Kittredge & Lehrberger 1982), culminating in a demonstration of the informational structures in texts of a sublanguage of science, that of immunology (Harris et al. 1989), and a fully articulated theory of linguistic informational content (Harris 1991). During this time, however, most linguists ignored such developments in favor of a succession of elaborate theories of sentence-level syntax and semantics.
In January 1953, a linguist working for the American Bible Society, James A. Lauriault (alt. Loriot), needed to find answers to some fundamental errors in translating Quechua, in the Cuzco area of Peru. Following Harris's 1952 publications, he worked over the meaning and placement of each word in a collection of Quechua legends with a native speaker of Quechua and was able to formulate discourse rules that transcended the simple sentence structure. He then applied the process to Shipibo, another language of Eastern Peru. He taught the theory at the Summer Institute of Linguistics in Norman, Oklahoma, in the summers of 1956 and 1957 and entered the University of Pennsylvania to study with Harris in the interim year. He tried to publish a paper,Shipibo Paragraph Structure, but it was delayed until 1970 (Loriot & Hollenbach 1970).[citation needed] In the meantime, Kenneth Lee Pike, a professor at the University of Michigan, taught the theory, and one of his students, Robert E. Longacre, developed it in his writings. Harris's methodology disclosing the correlation of form with meaning was developed into a system for the computer-aided analysis of natural language by a team led by Naomi Sager at NYU, which has been applied to a number of sublanguage domains, most notably to medical informatics. The software for the Medical Language Processor is publicly available on SourceForge.
In the humanities
In the late 1960s and 1970s, and without reference to this prior work, a variety of other approaches to a new cross-discipline of DA began to develop in most of the humanities and social sciences concurrently with, and related to, other disciplines. These include semiotics, psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, and pragmatics. Many of these approaches, especially those influenced by the social sciences, favor a more dynamic study of oral talk-in-interaction. An example is "conversational analysis" (CA), which was influenced by the sociologist Harold Garfinkel, the founder of ethnomethodology.
Perspectives
The following are some of the specific theoretical perspectives and analytical approaches used in linguistic discourse analysis:
- Applied linguistics, an interdisciplinary perspective on linguistic analysis
- Cognitive neuroscience of discourse comprehension
- Cognitive psychology, studying the production and comprehension of discourse.
- Conversation analysis
- Critical discourse analysis
- Discursive psychology
- Emergent grammar
- Ethnography of communication
- Functional grammar
- Interactional sociolinguistics
- Mediated stylistics
- Pragmatics
- Response based therapy (counselling)
- Rhetoric
- Stylistics (linguistics)
- Sublanguage analysis
- Tagmemics
- Text linguistics
- Variation analysis
Although these approaches emphasize different aspects of language use, they all view language as social interaction and are concerned with the social contexts in which discourse is embedded.
Often a distinction is made between 'local' structures of discourse (such as relations among sentences, propositions, and turns) and 'global' structures, such as overall topics and the schematic organization of discourses and conversations. For instance, many types of discourse begin with some kind of global 'summary', in titles, headlines, leads, abstracts, and so on.
Topics of interest
Topics of discourse analysis include:
- The various levels or dimensions of discourse, such as sounds (intonation, etc.), gestures, syntax, the lexicon, style, rhetoric, meanings, speech acts, moves, strategies, turns, and other aspects of interaction
- Genres of discourse (various types of discourse in politics, the media, education, science, business, etc.)
- The relations between discourse and the emergence of syntactic structure
- The relations between text (discourse) and context
- The relations between discourse and power
- The relations between discourse and interaction
- The relations between discourse and cognition and memory
- Lexical density
Political discourse
Political discourse is the text and talk of professional politicians or political institutions, such as presidents and prime ministers and other members of government, parliament or political parties, both at the local, national and international levels, includes both the speaker and the audience.
Political discourse analysis is a field of discourse analysis which focuses on discourse in political forums (such as debates, speeches, and hearings) as the phenomenon of interest. Policy analysis requires discourse analysis to be effective from the post-positivist perspective.
Political discourse is the formal exchange of reasoned views as to which of several alternative courses of action should be taken to solve a societal problem.
Corporate discourse
Corporate discourse can be broadly defined as the language used by corporations. It encompasses a set of messages that a corporation sends out to the world (the general public, the customers and other corporations) and the messages it uses to communicate within its own structures (the employees and other stakeholders).
See also
- Actor (policy debate)
- Critical discourse analysis
- Dialogical analysis
- Discourse representation theory
- Frame analysis
- Communicative action
- Essex School of discourse analysis
- Ethnolinguistics
- Foucauldian discourse analysis
- Interpersonal communication
- Linguistic anthropology
- Narrative analysis
- Pragmatics
- Rhetoric
- Sociolinguistics
- Statement analysis
- Stylistics (linguistics)
- Worldview
References
- "Discourse Analysis—What Speakers Do in Conversation". Linguistic Society of America. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
- "Yatsko's Computational Linguistics Laboratory". yatsko.zohosites.com. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
- Elden, Stuart (2016-11-10). "When did Foucault translate Leo Spitzer?". Progressive Geographies.
- Harris, Zellig (1952). "Discourse Analysis". Language. 28 (1): 1–30. doi:10.2307/409987. JSTOR 409987.
- Hardy, Donald E. (1991-04-01). "The foundations of linguistic theory: Selected writings of Roy Harris Ed. by Nigel Love (review)". Language. 67 (3). doi:10.2307/415056. ISSN 1535-0665. JSTOR 415056.
- John Corcoran, then a colleague of Harris in Linguistics at University of Pennsylvania, summarized and critically examined the development of Harris’s thought on discourse through 1969 in lectures attended by Harris’ colleagues and students in Philadelphia and Cambridge.
Corcoran, John (1972). Plötz, Senta (ed.). "Harris on the Structures of Language". Transformationelle Analyse. Frankfurt: Athenäum Verlag: 275–292. - "SIL International". SIL International. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
- "University of Pennsylvania |". www.upenn.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
- Loriot, James; Hollenbach, Barbara (1970). "Shipibo Paragraph Structure". Foundations of Language. 6 (1): 43–66. ISSN 0015-900X. JSTOR 25000427.
- "University of Michigan". umich.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
- http://mlp-xml.sourceforge.net/
- "Conversational Analysis | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
- Lynch, Michael (2011-07-13). "Harold Garfinkel obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
- James, Carl (June 1993). "What is applied linguistics?". International Journal of Applied Linguistics. 3 (1): 17–32. doi:10.1111/j.1473-4192.1993.tb00041.x. ISSN 0802-6106.
- Barbey, Aron K.; Colom, Roberto; Grafman, Jordan (January 2014). "Neural mechanisms of discourse comprehension: a human lesion study". Brain. 137 (1): 277–287. doi:10.1093/brain/awt312. ISSN 1460-2156. PMC 3954106. PMID 24293267.
- Yates, Diana. "Researchers map brain areas vital to understanding language". news.illinois.edu. University of Illinois. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
- Van Dijk, Teun (2005-01-01). "Critical discourse analysis". In Schiffrin, Deborah; Tannen, Deborah; Hamilton, Heidi E. (eds.). The Handbook of Discourse Analysis. Malden, Massachusetts, USA: Blackwell Publishers Ltd. pp. 352–371. doi:10.1002/9780470753460. ISBN 978-0-470-75346-0.
- Sutanto, Haryo; Purbaningrum, Dwi (2022-12-29). "Representation of Power and Ideology on Jokowi's Speech". WACANA: Jurnal Ilmiah Ilmu Komunikasi. 21 (2): 238–251. doi:10.32509/wacana.v21i2.2143. ISSN 2598-7402. S2CID 255654982.
- Kitaeva, Elena; Ozerova, Olga (2019). "Intertextuality in Political Discourse". Language, Power, and Ideology in Political Writing: Emerging Research and Opportunities. Advances in Linguistics and Communication Studies. pp. 143–170. doi:10.4018/978-1-5225-9444-4.ch007. ISBN 9781522594444. S2CID 197717211. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
- Wortham, Stanton; Kim, Deoksoon; May, Stephen, eds. (2017). Discourse and Education. Cham: Springer International Publishing. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-02243-7. ISBN 978-3-319-02242-0.
- Hult, F.M. (2015). "Making policy connections across scales using nexus analysis". In Hult, F.M.; Johnson, D.C (eds.). Research Methods in Language Policy and Planning: A Practical Guide (First ed.). Chichester, West Sussex: Wiley. pp. 217–31. ISBN 978-1-118-33984-8. OCLC 905699853..
- Johnson, David W.; Johnson, Roger T. (2000). "Civil political discourse in a democracy: The contribution of psychology". Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology. 6 (4): 291–317. doi:10.1207/S15327949PAC0604_01. ISSN 1532-7949.
- Sutanto, Haryo; Purbaningrum, Dwi (2022-12-29). "Representation of Power and Ideology on Jokowi's Speech". WACANA: Jurnal Ilmiah Ilmu Komunikasi. 21 (2): 238–251. doi:10.32509/wacana.v21i2.2143. ISSN 2598-7402. S2CID 255654982.
- Breeze, Ruth (2013). Corporate Discourse. London: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-4411-7753-7. OCLC 852898361.
External links
- DiscourseNet. International Association for Discourse Studies
- The Discourse Attributes Analysis Program and Measures of the Referential Process Archived 2023-03-16 at the Wayback Machine.
- Linguistic Society of America: Discourse Analysis, by Deborah Tannen
- Discourse Analysis by Z. Harris
- Daniel L. Everett, Documenting Languages: The View from the Brazilian Amazon Statement concerning James Loriot, p. 9
- A discourse analysis related international conference You can find some information and events related to Metadiscourse Across Genres by visiting MAG 2017 website
This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed November 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Discourse analysis DA or discourse studies is an approach to the analysis of written spoken or sign language including any significant semiotic event citation needed The objects of discourse analysis discourse writing conversation communicative event are variously defined in terms of coherent sequences of sentences propositions speech or turns at talk Contrary to much of traditional linguistics discourse analysts not only study language use beyond the sentence boundary but also prefer to analyze naturally occurring language use not invented examples Text linguistics is a closely related field The essential difference between discourse analysis and text linguistics is that discourse analysis aims at revealing socio psychological characteristics of a person persons rather than text structure Discourse analysis has been taken up in a variety of disciplines in the humanities and social sciences including linguistics education sociology anthropology social work cognitive psychology social psychology area studies cultural studies international relations human geography environmental science communication studies biblical studies public relations argumentation studies and translation studies each of which is subject to its own assumptions dimensions of analysis and methodologies citation needed HistoryThe examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message Early use of the term There is ongoing discussion about whether Austria born Leo Spitzer s Stilstudien Style Studies of 1928 is the earliest example of discourse analysis DA citation needed Michel Foucault translated it into French However the term first came into general use following the publication citation needed of a series of papers by Zellig Harris from 1952 reporting on work from which he developed transformational grammar in the late 1930s Formally equivalent relations among the sentences of a coherent discourse are made explicit by using sentence transformations to put the text in a canonical form Words and sentences with equivalent information then appear in the same column of an array This work progressed over the next four decades see references into a science of sublanguage analysis Kittredge amp Lehrberger 1982 culminating in a demonstration of the informational structures in texts of a sublanguage of science that of immunology Harris et al 1989 and a fully articulated theory of linguistic informational content Harris 1991 During this time however most linguists ignored such developments in favor of a succession of elaborate theories of sentence level syntax and semantics In January 1953 a linguist working for the American Bible Society James A Lauriault alt Loriot needed to find answers to some fundamental errors in translating Quechua in the Cuzco area of Peru Following Harris s 1952 publications he worked over the meaning and placement of each word in a collection of Quechua legends with a native speaker of Quechua and was able to formulate discourse rules that transcended the simple sentence structure He then applied the process to Shipibo another language of Eastern Peru He taught the theory at the Summer Institute of Linguistics in Norman Oklahoma in the summers of 1956 and 1957 and entered the University of Pennsylvania to study with Harris in the interim year He tried to publish a paper Shipibo Paragraph Structure but it was delayed until 1970 Loriot amp Hollenbach 1970 citation needed In the meantime Kenneth Lee Pike a professor at the University of Michigan taught the theory and one of his students Robert E Longacre developed it in his writings Harris s methodology disclosing the correlation of form with meaning was developed into a system for the computer aided analysis of natural language by a team led by Naomi Sager at NYU which has been applied to a number of sublanguage domains most notably to medical informatics The software for the Medical Language Processor is publicly available on SourceForge In the humanities In the late 1960s and 1970s and without reference to this prior work a variety of other approaches to a new cross discipline of DA began to develop in most of the humanities and social sciences concurrently with and related to other disciplines These include semiotics psycholinguistics sociolinguistics and pragmatics Many of these approaches especially those influenced by the social sciences favor a more dynamic study of oral talk in interaction An example is conversational analysis CA which was influenced by the sociologist Harold Garfinkel the founder of ethnomethodology PerspectivesThe following are some of the specific theoretical perspectives and analytical approaches used in linguistic discourse analysis Applied linguistics an interdisciplinary perspective on linguistic analysis Cognitive neuroscience of discourse comprehension Cognitive psychology studying the production and comprehension of discourse Conversation analysis Critical discourse analysis Discursive psychology Emergent grammar Ethnography of communication Functional grammar Interactional sociolinguistics Mediated stylistics Pragmatics Response based therapy counselling Rhetoric Stylistics linguistics Sublanguage analysis Tagmemics Text linguistics Variation analysis Although these approaches emphasize different aspects of language use they all view language as social interaction and are concerned with the social contexts in which discourse is embedded Often a distinction is made between local structures of discourse such as relations among sentences propositions and turns and global structures such as overall topics and the schematic organization of discourses and conversations For instance many types of discourse begin with some kind of global summary in titles headlines leads abstracts and so on Topics of interestTopics of discourse analysis include The various levels or dimensions of discourse such as sounds intonation etc gestures syntax the lexicon style rhetoric meanings speech acts moves strategies turns and other aspects of interaction Genres of discourse various types of discourse in politics the media education science business etc The relations between discourse and the emergence of syntactic structure The relations between text discourse and context The relations between discourse and power The relations between discourse and interaction The relations between discourse and cognition and memory Lexical densityPolitical discourse Political discourse is the text and talk of professional politicians or political institutions such as presidents and prime ministers and other members of government parliament or political parties both at the local national and international levels includes both the speaker and the audience Political discourse analysis is a field of discourse analysis which focuses on discourse in political forums such as debates speeches and hearings as the phenomenon of interest Policy analysis requires discourse analysis to be effective from the post positivist perspective Political discourse is the formal exchange of reasoned views as to which of several alternative courses of action should be taken to solve a societal problem Corporate discourse Corporate discourse can be broadly defined as the language used by corporations It encompasses a set of messages that a corporation sends out to the world the general public the customers and other corporations and the messages it uses to communicate within its own structures the employees and other stakeholders See alsoActor policy debate Critical discourse analysis Dialogical analysis Discourse representation theory Frame analysis Communicative action Essex School of discourse analysis Ethnolinguistics Foucauldian discourse analysis Interpersonal communication Linguistic anthropology Narrative analysis Pragmatics Rhetoric Sociolinguistics Statement analysis Stylistics linguistics WorldviewReferences Discourse Analysis What Speakers Do in Conversation Linguistic Society of America Retrieved 2019 11 25 Yatsko s Computational Linguistics Laboratory yatsko zohosites com Retrieved 2019 11 25 Elden Stuart 2016 11 10 When did Foucault translate Leo Spitzer Progressive Geographies Harris Zellig 1952 Discourse Analysis Language 28 1 1 30 doi 10 2307 409987 JSTOR 409987 Hardy Donald E 1991 04 01 The foundations of linguistic theory Selected writings of Roy Harris Ed by Nigel Love review Language 67 3 doi 10 2307 415056 ISSN 1535 0665 JSTOR 415056 John Corcoran then a colleague of Harris in Linguistics at University of Pennsylvania summarized and critically examined the development of Harris s thought on discourse through 1969 in lectures attended by Harris colleagues and students in Philadelphia and Cambridge Corcoran John 1972 Plotz Senta ed Harris on the Structures of Language Transformationelle Analyse Frankfurt Athenaum Verlag 275 292 SIL International SIL International Retrieved 2020 12 03 University of Pennsylvania www upenn edu Retrieved 2020 12 03 Loriot James Hollenbach Barbara 1970 Shipibo Paragraph Structure Foundations of Language 6 1 43 66 ISSN 0015 900X JSTOR 25000427 University of Michigan umich edu Retrieved 2020 12 03 http mlp xml sourceforge net Conversational Analysis Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2020 12 03 Lynch Michael 2011 07 13 Harold Garfinkel obituary The Guardian Retrieved 2020 12 03 James Carl June 1993 What is applied linguistics International Journal of Applied Linguistics 3 1 17 32 doi 10 1111 j 1473 4192 1993 tb00041 x ISSN 0802 6106 Barbey Aron K Colom Roberto Grafman Jordan January 2014 Neural mechanisms of discourse comprehension a human lesion study Brain 137 1 277 287 doi 10 1093 brain awt312 ISSN 1460 2156 PMC 3954106 PMID 24293267 Yates Diana Researchers map brain areas vital to understanding language news illinois edu University of Illinois Retrieved 2019 11 25 Van Dijk Teun 2005 01 01 Critical discourse analysis In Schiffrin Deborah Tannen Deborah Hamilton Heidi E eds The Handbook of Discourse Analysis Malden Massachusetts USA Blackwell Publishers Ltd pp 352 371 doi 10 1002 9780470753460 ISBN 978 0 470 75346 0 Sutanto Haryo Purbaningrum Dwi 2022 12 29 Representation of Power and Ideology on Jokowi s Speech WACANA Jurnal Ilmiah Ilmu Komunikasi 21 2 238 251 doi 10 32509 wacana v21i2 2143 ISSN 2598 7402 S2CID 255654982 Kitaeva Elena Ozerova Olga 2019 Intertextuality in Political Discourse Language Power and Ideology in Political Writing Emerging Research and Opportunities Advances in Linguistics and Communication Studies pp 143 170 doi 10 4018 978 1 5225 9444 4 ch007 ISBN 9781522594444 S2CID 197717211 Retrieved 2020 12 03 Wortham Stanton Kim Deoksoon May Stephen eds 2017 Discourse and Education Cham Springer International Publishing doi 10 1007 978 3 319 02243 7 ISBN 978 3 319 02242 0 Hult F M 2015 Making policy connections across scales using nexus analysis In Hult F M Johnson D C eds Research Methods in Language Policy and Planning A Practical Guide First ed Chichester West Sussex Wiley pp 217 31 ISBN 978 1 118 33984 8 OCLC 905699853 Johnson David W Johnson Roger T 2000 Civil political discourse in a democracy The contribution of psychology Peace and Conflict Journal of Peace Psychology 6 4 291 317 doi 10 1207 S15327949PAC0604 01 ISSN 1532 7949 Sutanto Haryo Purbaningrum Dwi 2022 12 29 Representation of Power and Ideology on Jokowi s Speech WACANA Jurnal Ilmiah Ilmu Komunikasi 21 2 238 251 doi 10 32509 wacana v21i2 2143 ISSN 2598 7402 S2CID 255654982 Breeze Ruth 2013 Corporate Discourse London Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 4411 7753 7 OCLC 852898361 External linksLibrary resources about Discourse analysis Resources in your library Resources in other libraries DiscourseNet International Association for Discourse Studies The Discourse Attributes Analysis Program and Measures of the Referential Process Archived 2023 03 16 at the Wayback Machine Linguistic Society of America Discourse Analysis by Deborah Tannen Discourse Analysis by Z Harris Daniel L Everett Documenting Languages The View from the Brazilian Amazon Statement concerning James Loriot p 9 A discourse analysis related international conference You can find some information and events related to Metadiscourse Across Genres by visiting MAG 2017 website