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Journal articles on the topic 'Non-discursive'

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1

Fossa, Pablo, María Elisa Molina, Sofía de la Puerta, and Michelle Barr. "Discursive and Non-discursive Symbolization during couple’s Conflict." Integrative Psychological and Behavioral Science 54, no. 4 (2020): 833–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12124-020-09558-9.

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Mamatha., N. "Journal of Housing and Advancement in Interior Designing." Journal of Housing and Advancement in Interior Designing 4, no. 1 (2021): 1–4. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4675678.

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What architecture adds to building: The concept is to set out the definition of architecture. The argument is that apart from being the basic necessity of bodily protection, buildings also contribute to the social needs. The two social needs being the social organisation of everyday life and the spatial configuration of space in which the function is imbibed. The social dimension of the building and the habits cultivated by human mind and practices are handled unconsciously and intuitively in the same way to handle the structures of language intuitively. The configurations are in general &ldqu
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Boichenko, Mykhailo. "SOCIAL THEORIES AND DISCURSIVE AND NON-DISCURSIVE SOCIAL PRACTICES: AN EDUCATIONAL TEST." Filosofska dumka (Philosophical Thought) -, no. 5 (2020): 23–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.15407/fd2020.05.023.

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The article is devoted to identifying the potential of using the results of the study of non-discursive social practices to understand the behavioral basis for the possible practical use of social theories. The example of the field of education focuses on the distinction between cognitive, affective and psychomotor dimensions of social communication. Assumptions have been made about the underestimation of the affective, and especially the psychomotor realm, to identify the resource and limits of discursive practices. Classical studies in educational psychology, primarily the works of Benjamin
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Ebru, Ugurel Ozdemir. "Resistance Against Discursive and Non-Discursive Signification: Self-Realization in She Unnames Them." Criterion: An International Journal in English 15, no. 4 (2024): 368–83. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13687904.

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Language not only operates the linguistic practices through symbol/word systems, but it has great significance in creating subjected subjects through the insidious force of a self-stimulating ideology, as well.  The role of language in subject formation is thus interrelated with the ideological aspect, which predetermines and conditions the position of individuals in parallel with the expectations. According to the Althusserian theory of interpellation, language functions as an instrument of the ideology by creating linguistic barriers between the sexes. Named through hailing, individuals
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Maia, Rousiley C. M. "NON-ELECTORAL POLITICAL REPRESENTATION: EXPANDING DISCURSIVE DOMAINS." Representation 48, no. 4 (2012): 429–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00344893.2012.712547.

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Lum, Gerard. "On the Non‐discursive Nature of Competence." Educational Philosophy and Theory 36, no. 5 (2004): 485–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-5812.2004.085_1.x.

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Sokolovsky, Ivan. "Siberian Intersectionality: Discursive and Non-Discursive Practices of Patriarchal Oppression in the XVII century." Ideas and Ideals 12, no. 2-1 (2020): 108–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.17212/2075-0862-2020-12.2.1-108-123.

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Penman, Christine. "Discourse analysis as social critique: discursive and non-discursive realities in critical social research." Language and Intercultural Communication 18, no. 6 (2017): 696–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14708477.2017.1365105.

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Schuppert, Fabian. "Discursive control, non-domination and Hegelian recognition theory." Philosophy & Social Criticism 39, no. 9 (2013): 893–905. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0191453713498389.

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Budden, Sandy, and Joanna Sofaer. "Non-discursive Knowledge and the Construction of Identity Potters, Potting and Performance at the Bronze Age Tell of Százhalombatta, Hungary." Cambridge Archaeological Journal 19, no. 2 (2009): 203–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959774309000274.

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This article explores the relationship between the making of things and the making of people at the Bronze Age tell at Százhalombatta, Hungary. Focusing on potters and potting, we explore how the performance of non-discursive knowledge was critical to the construction of social categories. Potters literally came into being as potters through repeated bodily enactment of potting skills. Potters also gained their identity in the social sphere through the connection between their potting performance and their audience. We trace degrees of skill in the ceramic record to reveal the material articul
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., Ganeshwar. "Periyar’s Spatial Thought: Region as Non-Brahmin Discursive Space." CASTE / A Global Journal on Social Exclusion 3, no. 1 (2022): 89–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.26812/caste.v3i1.358.

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Even as historical studies of the conceptualisation of the region in Tamil Nadu invariably trace it back to the early Dravidian movement, ‘region’ is seen as peripheral to Periyar’s radical anti-caste thought in existing scholarship. This flows from both a limited focus on the spatial aspects of Periyar’s thought and a narrow conceptualisation of space itself. Diverging from the dominant physicalist view of space, this article views Periyar’s politics of space as a radical attempt to subvert the cultural logic of hegemonic nationalism that sustained caste and its privileges through modernity.
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Cajaiba-Santana, Giovany. "Image construction in non-profit organizations: a discursive analysis." Academy of Management Proceedings 2013, no. 1 (2013): 14406. http://dx.doi.org/10.5465/ambpp.2013.14406abstract.

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Brown, Steven D., David Middleton, and Geoffrey Lightfoot. "Performing the Past in Electronic Archives: Interdependencies in the Discursive and Non-Discursive Ordering of Institutional Rememberings." Culture & Psychology 7, no. 2 (2001): 123–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1354067x0172001.

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14

Gheltofan, Daniela. "Some Considerations about Discursive Antonymy." Scientific Bulletin of the Politehnica University of Timişoara Transactions on Modern Languages 18 (January 12, 2022): 5–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.59168/ftqc2797.

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The contextual-discursive and syntactic-combinatorial side of the canonical and non-canonical antonyms contribute to the shaping of an antonymically configured discourse, as well as to the relief of an antonymic communicative-discursive impact. We consider that, in a functional-contextual plan, one can delimit the hyperonym concept discursive (functional) antonymy, along with the hyponymic concepts: stylistic antonymy, phraseological antonymy, paremiologic antonymy, aphoristic antonymy, terminological antonymy, scientific antonymy, etc. At the same time, contextual or occasional antonymy is pa
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Ribard, Dinah. "Arpenter. Essai d'analyse non procédurale et non discursive d'une querelle du XVIIIe siècle." Littératures classiques N° 81, no. 2 (2013): 269. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/licla.081.0269.

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16

Stevenson, David. "The cultural non-participant: critical logics and discursive subject identities." Arts and the Market 9, no. 1 (2019): 50–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/aam-01-2019-0002.

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Purpose The existence of so-called non-participants is a cultural policy problem in the UK and beyond. Yet, the very notion of a cultural non-participant seems nonsensical against the palpable evidence of lived experience. The purpose of this paper is to understand “who” a cultural non-participant is by first comprehending “what” the cultural non-participant is and why it exists. Design/methodology/approach Drawing on primary data generated in the form of 40 in-depth qualitative interviews, this paper employs a discursive methodology to explore the critical logics (Howarth, 2010) that underlie
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Xiong, Xuejiao. "A Critical Analysis on the Non-equivalence Between Bertha’s Identity and Discursive Power." Scientific and Social Research 3, no. 3 (2021): 55–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.36922/ssr.v3i3.1147.

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Bliss is one of Katherine Mansfield’s masterpieces, which is a short story containing a large number of discourses, i.e. speeches. Previous scholars analyzed this classical novel from many perspectives, among them the discursive power is less mentioned and is worth discussing. This paper applying critical discourse analysis theory on discursive power and the interrelation between discourse and power, discusses the non-equivalence between the identity and discursive power of the heroine, Bertha, aiming to provide a new perspective to appreciate the novel and unveil the power in discourse of the
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Schwab, Veit. "Book review: Benno Herzog, Discourse Analysis as Social Critique: Discursive and Non-Discursive Realities in Critical Social Research." Discourse & Society 29, no. 5 (2018): 596–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0957926517753792c.

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Abdullaeva, Ch. "Discursive Personality of Personage." Bulletin of Science and Practice 6, no. 9 (2020): 420–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.33619/2414-2948/58/43.

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The discursive personality of the character is manifested in a set of fragments and text units that characterize the character’s speech style, expressed by a number of individual semantic and stylistic, communicative and pragmatic, cognitive, gender, socio-cultural and psychological characteristics. The discursive personality of a character is a complex structure and includes characteristics inherent in the character and the author. Speech units, expressed in the discursive personality of the character and the author, refer to artistic dialogue, graphic means, and non-linear speech.
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20

Varkhotov, Taras A. "From Imagination to Map: Non-Discursive Foundations of Thought Experiment." Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Filosofiya, sotsiologiya, politologiya, no. 62 (August 1, 2021): 250–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/1998863x/62/24.

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Khraban, Tetiana. "A Discursive Approach to Modern Ukrainian Non-institutional Military Discourse." Social Communications: Theory and Practice 13, no. 2 (2022): 157–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.51423/2524-0471-2021-13-2-3.

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The aim of the article is to prove the need for discourse analysis for the study of modern Ukrainian non-institutional military discourse; to substantiate the methodological approach in line of discourse analysis to the study of the psychological and social context of the Ukrainian non-institutional military discourse. Materials &methods. The study has used a set of general scientific research methods (analysis, classification, systematization, explanation) in order to analyze scientific sources, to generalize research data, to define concepts. Results &discussions. The scientific inte
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Conroy, Dominic, and Richard de Visser. "‘Man up!’: Discursive constructions of non-drinkers among UK undergraduates." Journal of Health Psychology 18, no. 11 (2012): 1432–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1359105312463586.

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23

Kologlugil, Serhat. "Michel Foucault's archaeology of knowledge and economic discourse." Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 3, no. 2 (2010): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.23941/ejpe.v3i2.53.

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The literature in economic methodology has witnessed an increase in the number of studies which, drawing upon the postmodern turn in social sciences, pay serious attention to the non-epistemological-discursive elements of economic theorizing. This recent work on the "economic discourse" has thus added a new dimension to economic methodology by analyzing various discursive aspects of the construction of scientific meanings in economics. Taking a similar stance, this paper explores Michel Foucault's archaeological analysis of scientific discourses. It aims to show that his archaeological reading
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Rizwan, Snobra. "National identity premises in Pakistani social media debate over patriotism." Journal of Language and Politics 18, no. 2 (2019): 291–311. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jlp.17020.riz.

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Abstract This paper focuses on critical discourse analysis of national identity premises as they enter in Pakistan’s social media debate over patriotism and treason. Drawing on a theoretical framework that calls attention to the embeddedness of religious and nationalistic ideas in identification paradigm of a society, the analysis emphasizes the naturalized link in motivational/inspirational and factual/circumstantial premises and the discursive and non-discursive practices of a culture. It also shows how (supposed) lack of a clear sense of national identity is intrinsically connected to a pol
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Murillo Ornat, Silvia. "Reformulation Markers in Non-initial Position in Written English and Spanish." Complutense Journal of English Studies 29 (November 15, 2021): 35–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.5209/cjes.77793.

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This article presents a contrastive analysis of non-initial positions (less common and, therefore, marked) of explanatory reformulation markers in written language in English and Spanish, in relation to their discursive uses. To carry out this analysis, the cases of these markers found in a comparable English-Spanish corpus (Cobuild and CREA) are analyzed. Four positions are established, initial, intermediate, final and independent (Pons 2014), and the results of the non-initial positions are related to the different discursive uses of these markers (Murillo 2012, 2016a, 2016b), taking into ac
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Swarts, Jason. "Information Technologies as Discursive Agents: Methodological Implications for the Empirical Study of Knowledge Work." Journal of Technical Writing and Communication 38, no. 4 (2008): 301–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/tw.38.4.b.

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Work activities that are mediated by information rely on the production of discourse-based objects of work. Designs, evaluations, and conditions are all objects that originate and materialize in discourse. They are created and maintained through the coordinated efforts of human and non-human agents. Genres help foster such coordination from the top down, by providing guidance to create and recreate discourse objects of recurring social value. From where, however, does coordination emerge in more ad hoc discursive activities, where the work objects are novel, unknown, or unstable? In these situ
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Turci Domingo, Isabel. "Phénomènes liés à la transformation : la sublimation de l’expérience dans la publicité touristique en français." Çédille, no. 24 (2023): 523–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.25145/j.cedille.2023.24.26.

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Adopting the tourism semiosphere as a context, our theoretical framework evokes certain complementary semiotic processes involved in the generation of meaning. This perspective, linked to the notion of the institution of meaning, allows us to understand the intertwining of discursive and non-discursive action as well as the dialectical component that feeds the genesis and evolution of tourism imaginaries. Considering that discourse is the vehicle of imaginaries, we address the construction of the tourist object, the focal point of otherness. We analyse the discursive indices relating to its fu
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Kaunert, Christian, and Arif Sahar. "Violence, Terrorism, and Identity Politics in Afghanistan: The Securitisation of Higher Education." Social Sciences 10, no. 5 (2021): 150. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci10050150.

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This article investigates the securitisation of the higher education sector in Afghanistan by examining ‘hidden’ non-discursive practices as opposed to overt discursive threat construction. Non-discursive practices are framed by the habitus inherited from different social fields, whereas in Afghanistan, securitising actors converge from different habitus (e.g., institutions, professions, backgrounds) to bar the ‘other’ ethnic or social groups from resources and spaces which could empower these groups to become a pertinent threat, a fear, and a danger to the monopoly of the state elites over th
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Saguin, Kristian. "Producing an urban hazardscape beyond the city." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 49, no. 9 (2017): 1968–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0308518x17718373.

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Urban socioecological risk, like other urban metabolic processes, embodies relations between the city and the non-city. In this paper, I trace the production of urban risk within and beyond the city through the lens of the hazardscape using the case of Metro Manila and Laguna Lake in the Philippines. Building on recent interventions in urban political ecology that seek to map the terrains of extending urban frontiers, I examine the processes that construct city and non-city spaces in urbanization through flood control. I synthesize narratives of the material-discursive production of risk media
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Höppner, Grit. "Embodying of the self during interviews: An agential realist account of the non-verbal embodying processes of elderly people." Current Sociology 65, no. 3 (2015): 356–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0011392115618515.

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This article investigates from an agential realist perspective the way the embodying of the self is constituted during interviews. Since the aim is to analyze how, in Karen Barad’s words, ‘matter comes to matter,’ the approach presented here takes into account not only how discursive but also how material practices produce ‘embodying processes’ that differ according to situational references. The approach considers the influence of the agency of human and non-human bodies in terms of non-verbal body language. Using the case of Viennese elderly people, this article presents three sets of materi
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Lehner, Othmar M., Theresia Harrer, and Madeleine Quast. "Building institutional legitimacy in impact investing." Journal of Applied Accounting Research 20, no. 4 (2019): 416–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jaar-01-2018-0001.

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Purpose Impact investing denominates an investment logic that combines social and environmental goals, financial returns as well as personal values. The purpose of this paper is to consider the concept of legitimacy to be an appropriate way to understand how actors in the impact investing market influence discourse in order to overcome the inherent liability of newness – based on hybrid institutional logics – through their financial and non-financial communication. Design/methodology/approach Based on two theoretically defined sets of codes, a thematic discourse analysis is conducted by analys
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Toğral Koca, Burcu. "Syrian refugees in Turkey: from “guests” to “enemies”?" New Perspectives on Turkey 54 (May 2016): 55–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/npt.2016.4.

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AbstractSince the war erupted in Syria in 2011, Turkey has followed an “open door” policy toward Syrian refugees. The Turkish government has been promoting this liberal policy through a humanitarian discourse that leads one to expect that Syrian refugees have not been securitized in Turkey. This article, however, argues that a security framework that emphasizes control and containment has been essential to the governance of Syrian refugees in Turkey, despite the presence of such non-securitarian discourses. To develop this argument, the article first builds an analytical framework based on a c
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Soloshchuk, Lyudmila, and Yuliia Skrynnik. "Prototypical model of a discursive personality within the theory of values-based sociodiscourse." Journal of V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University. Series: Foreign Philology. Methods of Foreign Language Teaching, no. 100 (December 30, 2024): 69–76. https://doi.org/10.26565/2786-5312-2024-100-06.

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In this theoretical study the concept of the prototypical model of a discursive personality within the framework of the theory of values-based sociodiscourse is explored. The prototypical model, as conceived within this theory, represents a multidimensional structure that enables the analysis of values, roles, identity, and interpersonal interactions, all of which contribute to the formation of a personality in contemporary society. The model underscores the significance of values as guiding principles that shape an individual’s construal of the world. The prototypical model of a discursive pe
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Dudley, Michael. "Liberating Knowledge at the Margins." Canadian Journal of Academic Librarianship 5 (May 9, 2019): 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/cjal-rcbu.v5.29905.

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This paper proposes an LIS research paradigm by which the transactional relationships between knowledge organization systems (KOS) and external scholarly discourses may be identified and examined. It considers subject headings as discursive acts (or Foucauldian “statements”) unto themselves—in terms of their materiality, rarity, exteriority, and accumulation—arising from such discourses, and which, through their usage in library catalogues and databases, produce their own discursive and non-discursive effects. It is argued that, since these statements lead through their existence and discovery
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Ejsing, Mads, and Lars Tønder. "Enriching Discourse Theory: The Discursive-material Knot as a Non-Hierarchical Ontology: A Reply to Nico Carpentier." Global Discourse 9, no. 2 (2019): 385–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/204378919x15526540593642.

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In this reply, we question whether 'the knot' is the best way to describe the relationship between the discursive and the material. Our main objective is to show that the discursive and material are co-extensive and therefore emerge from within the same assemblage, prior to any 'knot' between them. To develop this idea, we draw on the new materialism of Karen Barad and Jane Bennett, especially their argument for how and why it makes sense to approach the discursive and the material as hyphenated ('discursive-material') as well as performatively constituted.
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Morozova, Iryna, and Anastasia Vakulenko. "Strategies and tactics of the British parental discourse: historical perspective." 97, no. 97 (June 28, 2023): 22–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.26565/2786-5312-2023-97-03.

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This article studies verbal and non-verbal means of implementing parental discourse strategies and tactics used by representatives of the British linguistic and cultural community of the 18th and 21st centuries and establishes the changes they underwent in the speech of the father’s and the mother’s discursive personality. The research is substantiated by linguists’ growing interest in the ways communicative behaviour is formed, including its diachronic aspects. The research is aimed at establishing characteristic features of British parents and children’s communication basing on British ficti
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Xu, Shuang, Yanbing Li, Yi Zou, Xiao Huang, and Tao Hu. "CORRELATION BETWEEN TEACHERS’ DISCOURSE STRATEGIES AND THE QUALITY OF STUDENTS’ SCIENTIFIC DISCOURSE IN WHOLE-CLASS TEACHING." Journal of Baltic Science Education 23, no. 4 (2024): 786–800. http://dx.doi.org/10.33225/jbse/24.23.786.

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Teachers’ discourse is instrumental in facilitating the emergence of students’ scientific discourse. Many studies have shown that teachers’ cognitive demand levels and discursive moves are the main factors in eliciting students’ scientific discourse, but few focus on whole-class (non-grouped) teaching settings. This research explored the correlation between teachers’ discourse strategies (the cognitive demand of questions and discursive moves) and students’ scientific discourse quality in whole-class teaching without intervention. Applying the chi-square test, correspondence analysis, and cont
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Budaev, E. V., and A. P. Chudinov. "POLITICAL METAPHOROLOGY AT THE PRESENT STAGE OF DEVELOPMENT (2010-2019)." Voprosy Kognitivnoy Lingvistiki, no. 3 (2020): 56–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.20916/1812-3228-2020-3-56-70.

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The article deals with the major trends of modern political metaphorology (2010-2019): cognitive (considering a political metaphor as a mental phenomenon); rhetorical (focused on the analysis of political metaphor as a pragmatic mechanism of influence on the addressee); discursive (exploring a metaphor in a broad extralinguistic context in different types of political discourse); semiotic (studying metaphor and especially non-verbal representations of metaphor as a special sign system reflecting the political life of society). The leading trends in the development of modern political metaphoro
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Hanitzsch, Thomas, and Tim P. Vos. "Journalism beyond democracy: A new look into journalistic roles in political and everyday life." Journalism 19, no. 2 (2016): 146–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884916673386.

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Journalism researchers have tended to study journalistic roles from within a Western framework oriented toward the media’s contribution to democracy and citizenship. In so doing, journalism scholarship often failed to account for the realities in non-democratic and non-Western contexts, as well as for forms of journalism beyond political news. Based on the framework of discursive institutionalism, we conceptualize journalistic roles as discursive constructions of journalism’s identity and place in society. These roles have sedimented in journalism’s institutional norms and practices and are su
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Mendoza, Arturo, Viviana Oropez, Daniel Rodríguez, Zazil Sobrevilla, and Joaquín Martínez. "Challenges, feelings, and attitudes towards writing in ERPP in semi-periphery countries." Journal of English for Research Publication Purposes 2, no. 2 (2021): 129–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jerpp.21008.men.

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Abstract This paper addresses writing in ERPP for graduate students matriculated in a Mexican Public University where the medium of instruction is Spanish. The students who were involved in our study registered for an academic writing course in ERPP, and submitted a draft research article in English as part of the admission requirements. Following a mixed-method approach, through a survey and a semi-structured interview, we aimed to explore the various ways in which students use English for research and publication purposes, the discursive and non-discursive challenges they perceived while dra
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Krysa, Isabella, Mariana Paludi, and Albert J. Mills. "The racialization of immigrants in Canada – a historical investigation how race still matters." Journal of Management History 25, no. 1 (2019): 97–113. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jmh-09-2018-0048.

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PurposeThis paper aims to investigate the discursive ways in which racialization affects the integration process of immigrants in present-day Canada. By drawing on a historical analysis, this paper shows how race continues to be impacted by colonial principles implemented throughout the colonization process and during the formation stages of Canada as a nation. This paper contributes to management and organizational studies by shedding light on the taken-for-granted nature of discursive practices in organizations through problematizing contemporary societal and political engagements with “race
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Carpentier, Nico. "The European Assemblage: A Discursive-Material Analysis of European Identity, Europaneity and Europeanisation." FILOSOFIJA. SOCIOLOGIJA. 32, no. 3 (2021): 231–39. https://doi.org/10.6001/fil-soc.v32i3.4495.

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Different academic disciplines have deployed a diversity of approaches to European identity, Europeanism and Europeanisation, with often a strong emphasis on their material-structural components. This article uses a discursive-material analysis, that acknowledges the importance of the material, but places it in a non-hierarchical relation with the discursive. Grounded in an extensive literature review on European identity, Europeanism and Europeanisation, the article first highlights the discursive nature of these concepts, how they engage in struggles with other place-based identities and dis
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Pomozova, Natalia B., and Nikolay V. Litvak. "Artificial Intelligence Ethics as a Realm of International Discursive Competition." Russia in Global Affairs 23, no. 2 (2025): 58–70. https://doi.org/10.31278/1810-6374-2025-23-2-58-70.

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It might seem that the global threat posed by the hybrid non-agentic/agentic nature of AI would encourage governments to jointly regulate it. Most states’ acts related to AI development include sections on ethical regulations, which reveal differing normative approaches that make discussions about AI ethics an important element of interstate discursive competition. Russia’s significant lag behind the U.S., China, and the EU does not preclude its possible emergence as a discursive competitor.
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Santos, Girlandia Gesteira, Yuri Andrei Batista Santos, and Vânia Lúcia Menezes Torga. "The ethos of non-existence." Linha D'Água 37, no. 1 (2024): 228–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.11606/issn.2236-4242.v37i1p228-244.

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In the line of dialogue between discourse studies and argumentation studies, we analyze the construction of ethos in the paratext of the book Recordações da minha inexistência - memórias (Recollections of my non-existence – memoir) by Rebecca Solnit (2021). In view of a writing that traces a counter-hegemonic discourse in the underlying social context in the argumentative dimension, an important point to observe is how the discursive project of this autobiographical writing articulates itself in the construction of the narrative ethos of the author-narrator-personage. To this end, we will anal
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Gaspard, Jeoffrey. "Discourse genres as determiners of discursive regularities: A case of semiotic predictability?" Sign Systems Studies 44, no. 3 (2016): 355–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/sss.2016.44.3.03.

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This article focuses on discursive regularities that can generally be observed in text corpora produced in similar communication situations (medical interviews, political debates, teaching classes, etc.). One type of such regularities is related to the so-called ‘discourse genres’, considered as a set of tacit instructions broadly constraining the forms of utterances in a given discursive practice. Those regularities highlight the relatively regulated, non-random nature of most of our discursive practices and epitomize the necessary constrained creativity of meaning making in discourse. In thi
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Carpentier, Nico. "Enriching Discourse Theory: the Discursivematerial Knot1 As a Non-Hierarchical Ontology." Global Discourse 9, no. 2 (2019): 369–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/204378919x15526540593633.

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Laclau and Mouffe's discourse theory has played a significant role in thinking through the political role of knowledge and ideology, without ignoring the significance of the material, also in relation to its post-Marxist agenda and the de-essentialisation of class relations. At the same time, there is a need to enrich discourse theory, by finding a better balance between the discursive and the material, and by providing a better theoretisation of the entanglement of the discursive and the material. This article remains grounded in, and loyal to, discourse theory, but aims to learn from new mat
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Plüschke-Altof, Bianka. "Rural as Periphery Per Se? Unravelling the Discursive Node." Sociální studia / Social Studies 13, no. 2 (2016): 11–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/soc2016-2-11.

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Despite often being used interchangeably, the dominant equation of the rural with the peripheral is not self-evident. In order to critically scrutinize the discursive node, the aim of this article is twofold. On one hand, it argues for overcoming the prevalent urban‒rural divide and dominant structural approaches in sociological and geographical research by introducing discursive peripheralization as a conceptual framework, which allows the analysis of the discursive (re-)production of socio-spatial inequalities on and between different scales. On the other hand, this article explores how rura
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Anscombre, Jean-Claude. "Théorie de l’argumentation, topoï, et structuration discursive." Revue québécoise de linguistique 18, no. 1 (2009): 13–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/602639ar.

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Résumé Les phénomènes de type argumentatif amènent l’auteur à envisager une régulation en termes de gradation et non plus de vrai/faux. Le concept de topos joue un rôle essentiel dans la dynamique discursive.
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Hultin, Lotta, and Lucas Introna. "On Receiving Asylum Seekers: Identity working as a process of material-discursive interpellation." Organization Studies 40, no. 9 (2018): 1361–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0170840618782280.

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This paper responds to recent calls to study how materiality is implicated in the process of subject positioning by grounding itself in a relational and performative ontology. By situating our analysis in Barad’s post-humanist view of discourse as material-discursive practice, and by drawing on the concepts of interpellation and hailing, we show how material-discursive practices at three different service sites of the Swedish Migration Board are profoundly constitutive of the manner in which asylum seekers and officers become hailed into various subject positions. In so doing, our study contri
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Tagangaeva, Maria. "“Socialist in content, national in form:” the making of Soviet national art and the case of Buryatia." Nationalities Papers 45, no. 3 (2017): 393–409. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905992.2016.1247794.

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This article examines the fine art of the Soviet national republics and its discourse in the Soviet Union, which were considerably shaped under the influence of socialist realism and Soviet nationality policy. While examining the central categories of Soviet artistic discourse such as the “national form,” “national distinctness,” and “tradition,” as well as cultural and scientific institutions responsible for the image of art of non-Russian nationalities, the author reveals the existence of a number of colonial features and discursive and institutional practices that foster a cultural divide b
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