Academic literature on the topic 'Parliamentary speeches'

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Journal articles on the topic "Parliamentary speeches"

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Lin, Nick, and Moritz Osnabrügge. "Making comprehensible speeches when your constituents need it." Research & Politics 5, no. 3 (July 2018): 205316801879559. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2053168018795598.

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Parliamentary speech is a prominent avenue that political elites can use in parliament to communicate with the electorate. However, we have little understanding of how exactly Members of Parliament craft their speeches to communicate with the districts they represent. We expect that Members of Parliament adapt the comprehensibility of their speeches to their constituents’ linguistic skills since doing so facilitates effective communication. Using parliamentary speeches from the German Bundestag, we reveal that Members of Parliament tend to make their speeches less complicated when their constituents are relatively poor, less educated, and come from an immigration background. Our findings have important implications for the study of political representation and communication strategies.
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Cranmer, Frank. "Parliamentary Report." Ecclesiastical Law Journal 13, no. 2 (April 26, 2011): 216–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956618x11000081.

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How liberal democracies can accommodate tenaciously-held religious views within the wider framework of human rights legislation and balance the resulting conflicts is a conundrum that confronts governments throughout Europe and was the theme of three major speeches delivered at the end of the period under review.
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David McCooey and David Lowe. "Autobiography in Australian Parliamentary First Speeches." Biography 33, no. 1 (2010): 68–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/bio.0.0159.

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Hjorth, Frederik. "Intergroup Bias in Parliamentary Rule Enforcement." Political Research Quarterly 69, no. 4 (August 6, 2016): 692–702. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1065912916658553.

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Political actors are often assigned roles requiring them to enforce rules without giving in-groups special treatment. But are such institutional roles likely to be successful? Here, I exploit a special case of exogenously assigned intergroup relations: debates in the Danish Parliament, in which Parliament chairmen drawn from parliamentary parties enforce speaking time. Analyzing 5,756 speeches scraped from online transcripts, I provide evidence that speech lengths are biased in favor of the presiding chairman’s party. On average, speakers of the same party as the presiding chairman give 5 percent longer speeches and are 5 percent more likely to exceed the speaking time limit. The paper contributes to the extant literature by demonstrating political intergroup bias in a natural setting, suggesting that group loyalties can supersede institutional obligations even in a “least likely” context of clear rules, complete observability, and a tradition of parliamentary cooperation.
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Cromartie, A. D. T. "The Printing of Parliamentary Speeches November 1640–July 1642." Historical Journal 33, no. 1 (March 1990): 23–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x0001308x.

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‘No member of this House’, proclaimed Bulstrode Whitelocke in February 1642 ‘ought to publish any speech or passage of this House, though it be very frequent.’ Very frequent it was; by this stage of the Long Parliament more than 100 purported speeches of named members were in printed circulation. Orations attributed to 45 M.P.s had been published, at a time when only ‘75 M.P.s made the motions, spoke to the issues, and delivered the reports of conferences and committees’. Printed speeches must have become a familiar genre to the customers of London booksellers. Invariably they were quarto in format; typically a pamphlet consisted of a single address, between three and eight sides in length and carelessly printed. Titles were informative and unpretentious: Mr. Thomas Pury his Speech upon the clause, the which concerns Deans and Chapters is a representative example. Most gave the date, or alleged date, of delivery, and the name of the printer responsible. There was nothing surreptitious, in other words, about the phenomenon. The chronological Thomason catalogue shows that speeches were significantly more numerous than any other kind of ephemeral tract, at least until March 1642, and that during the first session they were the only source of printed information about parliamentary debates. After March 1642 the flow of publication dried up. Large-scale publication of individual parliamentary speeches is therefore unique to a particular fifteen month period. Their importance, as historical sources, hardly needs stressing. The purpose of this article is primarily to explain the nature, and limitations, of the evidence this material can provide.
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Konstantinova, Anna, Svetlana Anufrienko, Asiyat Botasheva, Olga Totskaya, and Natalya Tkacheva. "Public parliamentary discourse in Russia and Germany: speech and genre specifics." SHS Web of Conferences 69 (2019): 00008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/20196900008.

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In the article the approaches to the problem of political discourse speech genres differentiation are discussed based on the comparative analysis of the German and Russian public parliamentary speech authentic samples. The special status of the public speech phenomenon in parliamentary communication and its conditionality by parliamentary regulations are discussed. The communicative roles of plenary sessions’ participants in Germany and Russia are described. In both parliaments, public parliamentary speech is exercised in a dialogue form, managed and controlled by the president of the Bundestag / presiding plenary session. The existence of common political goals of German and Russian public parliamentary communication proves the expediency of its comprehensive comparative study, taking into account extralinguistic and linguistic characteristics of public parliamentary speeches. The statements, representing the German and Russian public parliamentary speech, form a set of institutional genres, the emergence and functioning of which are predetermined by the parliamentary regulations. In both parliaments, they include a report, a statement, a question, and a reply, presented in several intragenre varieties, with specific national variants. Each of these genres is characterized by the use of specific methods of language expression, emotional utterances, rhetorical and polemical techniques.
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Jurewicz, Magdalena. "Cultural context in parliamentary discourse with examples of parallel speeches in the polish Sejm and the German Bundestag – reflections from a translator’s perspective." Lingua Posnaniensis 60, no. 1 (June 1, 2018): 49–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/linpo-2018-0004.

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Abstract The article presents examples of cultural references made by Polish MPs speaking in the Polish Sejm and German MPs speaking in the German Bundestag. The term “cultural context” will be used as defined by Boniecka (1994). There will be presented two examples of parliamentary speeches given in the Polish Sejm and the German Bundestag from a larger corpus of collected data for the purpose of the research on the appellative function of the word “wish”. The starting point for compiling texts was the minutes of the parliamentary debates of the Polish Sejm which contained the word “życzyć” (“wish” in Polish) and the minutes of parliamentary debates in the Bundestag which contained the word “wünschen” (‘wish” in German) in the first person singular and plural. The topic of the speeches had a secondary meaning. On the basis of the examples it discussed will be shown that parallel texts of MP’s speeches are a valuable teaching material in specialised language lessons.
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Giannetti, Daniela, and Andrea Pedrazzani. "Rules and Speeches: How Parliamentary Rules Affect Legislators' Speech-Making Behavior." Legislative Studies Quarterly 41, no. 3 (May 11, 2016): 771–800. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/lsq.12130.

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Pearson, Mark, and Camille Galvin. "The Australian Parliament and press freedom in an international context." Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa 13, no. 2 (November 1, 2019): 139–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.24135/pjr.v13i2.910.

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The article reports on a study using grounded theory methodology to track the contexts in which Australian parliamentarians used the expressions 'press freedom' and 'freedom of press' over the ten years from 1994 to 2004. It uses Parliamentry Hansard records to identify the speeches in which discussions of press freedom arose. Interestingly, the terms were used by members of the House of Representativies or Senate in just 78 speeches out of more than 180,000 over that decade. Those usages have been coded to develop a theory about the interface between press freedom and the parliament. This article reports just one aspect of the findings from the larger study—the way parliamentarians have contrasted the value of press freedom in Australia with press freedom in other countries. It is one step towards building a broader theory of press freedom in the Australian parliamentary context.
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Dawidziak-Kładoczna, Małgorzata. "Zagajenia marszałka sejmu — ewolucja wzorca gatunkowego od XVI wieku do dziś." Język a Kultura 26 (February 22, 2017): 163–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.19195/1232-9657.26.13.

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Opening speeches of the Speaker of the Sejm — evolution of the genre pattern from the 16th century till todayAn opening speech is avariant of aparliamentary speech delivered by the Speaker of the Sejm at the beginning of each day of parliamentary debate. It differs from other types of parliamentary speeches, because typically the latter represents the rhetoric style, whereas an opening speech combines rhetoric and official styles. The former style predominated until the 19th century, while after 1861 atypically official style begins to predominate. It has always been amulti-segment text, but the number of segments and their character have evolved with time. Thus, the number of elements of the composition is limited and the degree of their mandatory nature varies, which results from, e.g. external determinants context. When illocutions are concerned, their general aims never change, contrary to detailed aims, even though since the times of the Diet of the Kingdom of Galicia relative stability may be observed in this respect. The stylistic aspect is the most significant. Although a feature of the opening speech is its openness, its form is schematic allowing for certain modifications. Two phenomena may be observed here — restricting the repertory of means petrification, standardisation and enriching the texts with etiquette formulas
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Parliamentary speeches"

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Bullard, Paddy. "Contexts for Edmund Burke's rhetoric, 1756-1780." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.391014.

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Mchakulu, Japhet Ezra July. "Framing political communication in an African context : a comparative analysis of post-election newspaper editorials and parliamentary speeches in Malawi." Thesis, University of Leicester, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2381/9698.

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The study compares and examines parliamentary rhetoric against newspapers editorials in Malawi to establish whether or not there are parallels in the way political issues are presented in both arenas. The study intends to establish whether or not newspapers in Malawi provide critical and analytical voices for newspaper readers or whether or not they simply reflect the political positions of their owners’ political parties by reflecting those political parties’ rhetoric in parliament. The study uses three case studies. Specifically, these are the one hundred days following 1994, 1999 and 2004 elections. Newly elected governments tend to use the early days of their election into office to articulate and lay the foundations of implementing their policies. The study uses frame theory analysis as a theoretical and analytical tool. The four main components of a frame: Problem Definition, Causal Interpretation, Moral Evaluation and Treatment Recommendation are used to detect frames in the corpora. Data were coded in accordance with the grounded theory method. Findings indicate that in 1994 and 1999, newspaper editorial writers framed political issues by reflecting the positions of their owners. However, in the 2004 case study, while the newspapers’ framing of political issues did not differ from parliamentary framing, changes in ownership and owners’ political re-alignment affected framing. The newspapers no longer reflected the position of the political parties, there was no division along political party-lines, and they did not take cues from parliament The study contributes to the study of political communication in Malawi by studying frames emerging from editorial and parliamentary discourse. Further, it contributes to a further understanding of linkages between issue-specific frames and generic frames in the African context.
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Alexander, Ödlund Lindholm. "The Salience of Issues in Parliamentary Debates : Its Development and Relation to the Support of the Sweden Democrats." Thesis, Linköpings universitet, Institutionen för ekonomisk och industriell utveckling, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-167610.

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The aim of this study was to analyze the salience of issue dimensions in the Swedish parliament debates by the established parties during the rise of the Sweden Democrats Party (SD). Structural topic modeling was used to construct a measurement of the salience of issues, examining the full body of speeches in the Swedish parliament between September 2006 and December 2019. Trend analysis revealed a realignment from a focus on socio-economic to socio-cultural issues in Swedish politics. Cross-correlation analyses had conflicting results, indicating a weak positive relationship between the salience of issues and the support of SD – but low predictive ability; it also showed that changes in the support of SD did lead (precede) changes in the salience of issues in the parliament. The ramifications of socio-cultural issues being the most salient are that so-called radical right-wing populist parties (RRPs), or neo-nationalist parties, has a greater opportunity to gain support. It can make voters more inclined to base their voting decision on socio-cultural issues, which favors parties who fight for and are trustworthy in those issues – giving them more valence in the eyes of the voters.
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Matthews, Nicholas C. "The influence of aggressive communication and biological sex on debater-judge conflicts in parliamentary debate." Thesis, California State University, Long Beach, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1586871.

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This study examines how debate judges' perceptions of argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness are influenced by sex in the "reason for decision" stage of parliamentary debate. Participants viewed one of four videos that manipulated the sex of the actor and the level of verbal aggressiveness used to express disagreement after a debate round. The results suggest that judges perceive female debaters as significantly more verbally aggressive than male debaters in their reasons for decisions. Other sex differences for perceived argumentativeness and verbal aggressiveness were not significant. The results also indicate that perceived debater argumentativeness is positively related to perceived debater credibility; conversely, perceived debater verbal aggressiveness is negatively related to perceived debater credibility. Finally, the results suggest that female debaters are perceived as significantly lower in interpersonal justice than male debaters in reason for decisions.

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El, Fellah Souad. "L'apostrophe dans les discours parlementaires en France et au Maroc : approche comparative." Thesis, Montpellier 3, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016MON30081/document.

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L'apostrophe est un marqueur de coénonciation et d'altérité dans le genre du discours les Questions au gouvernement. C'est une entité structurante incorporant soi-même et l'autre dans l'échange pendant l'exercice institutionnel Question / Réponse. Elle conforte la relation interpersonnelle préétablie par et dans la scène institutionnelle en déterminant les types de relations interpersonnelles sous-jacentes qui s'établissent entre les coénonciateurs dans la situation de face-à-face
The apostrophe is a marker of coenonciation and otherness in the kind of the speech the Questions to the government. It is a structuring entity incorporating oneself and the other in the exchange during the institutional exercise Question / Answer. It consolidates the interpersonal relationship preestablished by and in the institutional scene by determining the types of subjacent interpersonal relationships which are established between the coénonciateurs in the situation of face-to-face discussion
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Truan, Naomi. "“Who Are You Talking About?”. The Pragmatics of Third-Person Referring Expressions : a Contrastive Corpus-Based Study of British, German, and French Parliamentary Debates." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019SORUL014.

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Ce travail analyse la manière dont les expressions de la troisième personne dénotant des êtres humains peuvent référer aux destinataires d’un énoncé – par opposition à l’allocutaire – en français, anglais et allemand. Les formes de la troisième personne incluent tout élément linguistique déclenchant un accord à la troisième personne, considérée comme une catégorie hétérogène : pronoms (il(s), elle(s), on, en français, he, she, they, one en anglais, er, sie, man en allemand), pronoms interrogatifs et indéfinis (qui, quiconque, whoever, anyone, wer), quantifieurs (tous, chacun, certains, all, every, anyone, some, alle, jeder, manche, etc.), relatives précédées par ceux (ceux qui, those who, diejenigen, die) et groupes nominaux contenant un nom dénotant un agent humain (peuple, personnes, citoyen, people, citizen, Volk, Leute, Menschen, Bürger, etc.). A partir d’un corpus de débats parlementaires en France, en Allemagne et au Royaume-Uni, nous montrons que les locuteurs peuvent référer aux destinataires, conçus comme un rôle discursif distinct des personnes empiriques, par des expressions de la troisième personne. L’accent mis sur la première et la deuxième personnes a conduit à un relatif oubli des formes de la troisième personne. Pourtant, la conceptualisation des destinataires par des expressions de la troisième personne est explicite, omniprésente, fonctionnelle et se produit à une fréquence égale dans l’ensemble du corpus. En se concentrant sur le rôle discursif du destinataire, une attention particulière est accordée au système constitué par la deuxième et la troisième personnes, prises dans leur continuité plutôt que leur opposition, dans l’acte de référence
Based on a corpus of British, French, and German parliamentary debates, this research presents an integrated account of how third person expressions denoting human referents can encode the targets of an utterance – as opposed to the addressee. Third person forms include every linguistic item triggering third person agreement, regarded as a heterogeneous category: third person pronouns (he, she, one, they in English, il(s), elle(s), on in French, er, sie, man in German), interrogative and indefinite pronouns (whoever, qui, quiconque, wer), quantifiers (all, every, many, some, anyone, tous, chacun, beaucoup, certains, alle, jeder, viele, manche, etc.), relative clauses introduced by those (those who, ceux qui, diejenigen, die), and noun phrases containing a noun denoting a human agent (people, citizen, peuple, personnes, citoyen , Volk, Leute, Menschen, Bürger, etc.). I combine a trilingual contrastive research design with a qualitative discourse-analytic and a quantitative corpus- based perspective to determine how reference to the targets of an utterance, conceived as a speech role distinct from the empirical persons, can be achieved by third person expressions. With most existing research focusing on the first and second persons, third person reference has been considerably neglected. Yet, the conceptualisation of targets via third person expressions is explicit, pervasive, functional, and occurs with equal frequency throughout the political spectrum. By focusing on the newly refined speech role of the target, attention is given to the continuity between second and third grammatical persons as a system referring to addressees and targets of an utterance
In dieser Arbeit präsentiere ich eine umfassende Analyse der Funktionsweisen von englischen, französischen und deutschen Ausdrücken der dritten Person zur Bezeichnung menschlicher Referenten, an die eine Äußerung gerichtet ist. Zu den Formen der dritten Person gehören alle sprachlichen Elemente, die in Bezug auf die grammatischen Kategorien Person und Numerus mit Verben in der dritten Person verwendet werden: Personalpronomen (er, sie, man im Deutschen, he, she, they, one im Englischen, il(s), elle(s), im Französischen), Interrogativ- oder Indefinitpronomen (wer, whoever, qui, quiconque), Quantifikatoren (alle, jeder, viele, manche, all, every, many, some, anyone, tous, chacun, beaucoup, certains), Relativsätze (diejenigen, die, ceux qui, those who), und Nominalsyntagmen, die ein Substantiv enthalten, das einen menschlichen Referenten bezeichnet (Volk, Leute, Menschen, Bürger, people, citizen, peuple, personnes, citoyen, etc.). Anhand eines Korpus britischer, französischer und deutscher Parlamentsdebatten kombiniere ich ein sprachkontrastives Forschungsdesign mit einer qualitativen Diskursanalyse und einer quantitativen korpusbasierten Perspektive, um zu bestimmen, wie der Bezug auf die gemeinten Referenten erfolgt. Bisher hat sich die Forschung auf Formen der ersten und zweiten Person konzentriert und die dritte Person vernachlässigt, obwohl explizite, funktionale Bezüge auf den intendierten Referenten einer Äußerung in der dritten Person allgegenwärtig sind und im gesamten politischen Spektrum vorkommen
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Oliveira, Maria Rodrigues de. "Discurso parlamentar: estratégias de retextualização." Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 2009. https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/14595.

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This dissertation deals with the retextualization of parliamentary debates and intends to map changes introduced by retextualizers during the transformation of parliamentary oral speeches into written texts, as well as to analyze these changes in order to understand their implications for the meaning of the text. The research is relevant because parliamentary debates contribute to the validation of Executive and Legislative acts. Translated from oral into written language, these speeches make up the annals of legislative chambers, and so become essential historic records, and can be ordered by the Courts as evidence in legal proceedings. The retextualization of these speeches, having in mind the importance of what is said in plenary sessions, should excel in their fidelity to the speaker s words and respect for his style. However, these two requirements are not always met because there are changes in the retextualization process that distance the source text (speech) from the secondary text (written). This research is based primarily on studies located in the field of Textual Linguistics and Conversation Analysis and its corpus consists of extracts from five Guarulhos City Chamber (São Paulo State) ordinary sessions that took place between 2001 and 2007. The results indicate that deletions, insertions and substitutions are the main changes made by retextualizers and that those affect the style, the speakers words and the meaning of the text
Esta dissertação trata da retextualização de discursos parlamentares e tem como objetivo o levantamento de alterações promovidas por retextualizadores na passagem de discursos parlamentares orais para a modalidade escrita, como também a análise dessas alterações com vistas às suas implicações para o sentido do texto. Justifica-se pelo fato de que os discursos parlamentares contribuem para a validação de atos dos Poderes Executivo e Legislativo. Transpostos da modalidade oral para a escrita, esses discursos compõem os anais das casas legislativas, constituindo-se em registros essenciais para a história, além de poderem ser requisitados pela Justiça para instrução de peças judiciais. A retextualização desses discursos, tendo em vista a importância do que é dito no plenário, deveria primar pela fidelidade ao dito pelo orador e pelo respeito ao seu estilo. Observa-se, porém, que esses dois itens nem sempre são atendidos, pois, no processo de retextualização, ocorrem mudanças que afastam o texto derivado (escrito) do texto fonte (oral). A investigação fundamenta-se primordialmente em estudos situados no campo da Lingüística Textual e da Análise da Conversação e tem como corpus cinco trechos de atas de sessões ordinárias da Câmara Municipal de Guarulhos, Estado de São Paulo, realizadas no período de 2001 a 2007. Os resultados indicam que eliminações, inserções e substituições são as principais alterações realizadas pelos retextualizadores que afetam o estilo, o dito do orador e o sentido do texto
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Oliveira, Maria Rodrigues de. "Discurso parlamentar: retextualização e (des)cortesia em foco." Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 2016. https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/19243.

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This research is part of the Line of Research ‘Text and discourse in the oral and written modalities’, of the Postgraduate Studies Program in the Portuguese Language of the Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, and deals with parliamentary speeches, focusing on their retextualization and on the (dis)courtesy present in these speeches, especially that arising from requests of corrections to be made in another's speech. In parliamentary sessions, it is common for speakers to utter words considered discourteous by their peers, who request the correction of these words in the retextualized text to save their own faces or third-party faces. From the hypotheses that such requests for corrections would in fact aid in the expansion of the threat to the faces in the plenary sessions and that the corrections in the retextualized speeches would not contribute to saving those same faces, in addition to the certainty that some retextualization practices may lead to a distortion of what the speaker has said, this research aims to answer the following questions: a) do requests for corrections in another’s speech in a plenary session contribute to saving threatened faces or cause an exacerbation of the threat?; b) do the corrections made by retextualizers in response to such requests fulfill the task of saving faces in the written text?; c) do the corrections made by retextualizers in order to make speeches meet the standards recommended by the legislative bodies or for personal reasons have an effect on aspects of (dis)courtesy? Based on studies of Discourse Analysis, Text Linguistics, Conversation Analysis and Interactional Sociolinguistics, in addition to procedure manuals of legislative bodies, relevant legislation, this thesis analyzes a corpus made up of four blocks of speeches delivered in the House of Representatives. The results obtained suggest that: a) the requests for corrections of another's speech at plenary sessions do not contribute to saving faces but causes an expansion of the threat; b) corrections made by retextualizers in response to such requests do not fulfill the face saving task but, to the contrary, they aid in arousing an interest in the threats; c) the corrections made by retextualizers to adjust speeches to the standards recommended by legislative bodies or for personal reasons can result both in the insertion of courtesy and of discourtesy in the speeches published in the written form. This research is justified by the need to contribute to an awareness of the relevance of the written record of parliamentary speeches and to the changing of retextualization practices in order to prioritize what is said in the speeches, not what the speaker should or would have said. Therefore, this thesis brings contributions to the task of retextualizing parliamentary speeches and intends to arouse the attention of researchers to this vast field of study that is still little explored
A pesquisa insere-se na Linha de Pesquisa “Texto e discurso nas modalidades oral e escrita”, do Programa de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Língua Portuguesa da Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, e trata do discurso parlamentar com foco em sua retextualização e na (des)cortesia corrente nesses discursos, principalmente aquela oriunda de pedidos de correção nos discursos alheios. Nas sessões parlamentares é comum que os oradores pronunciem termos considerados descorteses por seus pares, os quais solicitam a correção desses termos no texto retextualizado com vistas à proteção das próprias faces ou das faces de terceiros. A partir das hipóteses de que tais pedidos de correção colaborariam para a expansão da ameaça às faces no plenário e de que as correções nos discursos retextualizados não contribuiriam para a proteção das mesmas faces, além da certeza de que algumas práticas retextualizadoras podem levar ao falseamento do dito pelo orador, a pesquisa propõe-se a responder às seguintes questões: a) as solicitações de correção no discurso do outro no plenário contribuem para o salvamento das faces ameaçadas ou provocam exacerbação da ameaça?; b) as correções realizadas pelos retextualizadores em atendimento a tais solicitações cumprem o papel de proteção de faces no texto escrito?; c) as correções efetuadas pelos retextualizadores para adequação dos discursos a padrões recomendados pelas casas legislativas ou por motivos pessoais atuam sobre os aspectos da (des)cortesia? Fundamentada em estudos da Análise do Discurso, da Linguística Textual, da Análise da Conversação e da Sociolinguística Interacional, além de manuais de procedimentos de casas legislativas e de legislação pertinente, esta tese analisa um corpus formado por quatro blocos de discursos proferidos na Câmara dos Deputados. Os resultados obtidos indicam: a) as solicitações de correção do discurso do outro no plenário não contribuem para o salvamento de faces e provoca a expansão da ameaça; b) as correções realizadas pelos retextualizadores em atendimento a tais solicitações não cumprem o papel de proteção de faces e, sim, colaboram para despertar o interesse pelas ameaças; c) as correções efetuadas pelos retextualizadores para adequação dos discursos a padrões recomendados pelas casas legislativas ou por motivos pessoais podem atuar tanto para a implantação da cortesia quanto da descortesia nos discursos publicados na forma escrita. A pesquisa justifica-se pela necessidade de se contribuir para a conscientização da importância do registro escrito dos discursos parlamentares e para a mudança das práticas de retextualização no sentido de se privilegiar o que é dito nos discursos e não aquilo que o orador deveria ou desejaria dizer. Ela traz, portanto, contribuições para os trabalhos de retextualização de discursos parlamentares e pretende despertar a atenção de pesquisadores para o estudo de campo tão vasto e ainda pouco explorado
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Seward, Daniel Edward 1971. "Civic voice in Elizabethan parliamentary oratory: the rhetoric and composition of speeches delivered at Westminister in 1566." Thesis, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3951.

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The revival of classical rhetoric has come to be seen as a defining feature of the Renaissance, one manifest in a vast body of educational literature and cultural commentary. This discourse borrows and reshapes principles of Greek and Roman rhetoricians for contemporary social purposes. Much of the early scholarship on this cultural trend emphasizes the connection between the revived classical rhetoric and the self-conscious civic humanism apparent in school curricula and learned culture. The figure of the orator played an especially important role in this movement. Scholars have pointed out that the orator was presented by many educators and social critics as a noble vir civilis, one learned in literature, articulate in speech, and active in civil society. While Renaissance reformulations of classical oratory and emphases on the figure of the orator have been studied quite extensively as they appear in written works of the period, much less attention has been given to civic orations actually delivered. This study attempts to redress that gap in our understanding of early modern civic discourse, especially by investigating the triangulated relationship between humanist rhetorical education, Renaissance concepts of the power of eloquence, and civic speech as an institutionalized rhetorical practice. Parliament, often compared by Tudor writers to the Greek Areopagus and Roman Senate, provides an ideal locus of investigation, since the speeches delivered there were categorically civic in nature and regularly addressed the traditional subjects of classical deliberative oratory. Yet close analyses of speeches from Elizabeth I's 1566 session reveal that the common Renaissance images of the orator are unsuitable for characterizing the expressions of civic voice exhibited in actual public speaking, just as the classical codification of civic speech provides an insufficient hermeneutic tool for understanding the rhetorical purposes of orations delivered in Tudor institutions. Parliamentary orators did not see the revived classical rhetoric as the only, or even the primary, tool for composing orations in civic venues, but rather drew significantly upon institutional customs, procedural gestures, and alternative language arts, such as dialectic and sermonic prophesying, in order to establish finely nuanced stances within the rhetorical situation.
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Carvalho, João Lázaro Cavaleiro Diz de. "O despontar do movimento operário na esfera pública." Master's thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10071/6722.

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A emergência de um movimento operário atesta importantes transformações — quer socioeconómicas quer políticas — no Portugal oitocentista, nomeadamente a partir da década de 50. É nesta fase, em que o projeto liberal está vitoriosamente consolidado, que surge a primeira geração de socialistas que tenta dar resposta à questão social e do trabalho, difundindo um novo discurso e ideias para o espaço público, onde se destaca o periodicismo. Esta dissertação pretende abordar o movimento operário, dando enfâse a algumas práticas que começam a ser desenvolvidas nesta fase, sobretudo, através do jornal Eco dos Operários e do Centro Promotor dos Melhoramentos das Classes Laboriosas e do seu jornal. Não sendo descurado, que este movimento operário está inserido num período marcado pela concretização de uma política centrada no desenvolvimento do país, uma fase conhecida por Regeneração. Perante isto, não é esquecida a análise do discurso realizado pelos deputados nas Câmaras sobre o mundo operário. A esta luz, não é de estranhar termos como ponto de partida que a década de 50 de oitocentos seja fortemente marcada por um importante despontar do movimento operário na esfera pública, sendo veiculado para o espaço público um vasto leque de assuntos referentes ao mundo operário, oriundos de sectores distintos da sociedade, como é o caso do próprio movimento operário e do Parlamento.
The emergence of the working class movement testifies both socio-economic and political transformation in eighteenth-century Portugal, particularly since 1750. At this stage, when the liberal project is successfully consolidated, the first generation of socialists emerges to address the social and work issues, disseminating their ideas to the public through the periodicals. This dissertation aims to describe the working class movement, focusing on some of the workers’ practices that took place at that time, namely the newspaper Eco dos Operários and the Centro Promotor dos Melhoramentos das Classes Laboriosas and respective newspaper. Yet, it should not be overlooked that the working class movement occurs in a period marked by the completion of a policy focused on country development, a period known as Regeneração. In view of this, the analysis of the speech on workers’ situation by the members of Council was not forgotten. Considering the above, it is not surprising that the 1850s were a time characterized by the significant emergence of the working class movement into the public sphere and a vast number of issues associated with the workers’ movement and working world, from different sectors of society, were conveyed to the public sphere, such as the workers’ movement itself and the Parliament.
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Books on the topic "Parliamentary speeches"

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Acakzaʼī, Maḥmūd K̲h̲ān. Parliamentary speeches (1990-1996). Pakistan]: [publisher not identified], 2005.

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Mill, John Stuart. Public and parliamentary speeches. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1988.

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Rohee, Clement J. Selected parliamentary speeches, 1994-1996. Georgetown, Guyana: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of Guyana, 1996.

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Parliamentary speeches of Maulana Syed Asʾad Madani. New Delhi: Manak Publications, 2007.

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M, Kois Lisa, and International Centre for Ethnic Studies., eds. Transcending the bitter legacy: Selected parliamentary speeches. Colombo: International Centre for Ethnic Studies, 2000.

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Ḍekā, Nīlamaṇi Sena, editor, compiler, ed. An indomitable parliamentarian: Parliamentary speeches of Tarun Gogoi. Guwahati: Aank-Baak, 2013.

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Mill, John Stuart. Public and parliamentary speeches: November 1850-November 1868. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1988.

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Satyamurti, S. Mr. President Sir: Parliamentary speeches of S. Satyamurti. Madras: Satyamurti Foundation, 1988.

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India. Parliament. Lok Sabha. Secretariat, ed. Strengthening parliamentary democracy: Selected speeches of speaker Somnath Chatterjee. New Delhi: Lok Sabha Secretariat, 2009.

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Okae, Nana Bram. Order, order, please!: A guide book for the chairman and presiding member (PM) with a section for the secretary too and several examples of letters, speeches, and minutes. Mamprobi, Accra: Peaceland Consult, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Parliamentary speeches"

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Bell, Ilona. "Parliamentary Speeches (1563, 1566) and the Psalter Posy." In Elizabeth I, 93–115. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230107861_6.

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Marcus, Leah S. "Collaboration in the Parliamentary Speeches of Queen Elizabeth I." In Gender, Authorship, and Early Modern Women’s Collaboration, 47–69. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-58777-6_3.

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Kapočiūtė-Dzikienė, Jurgita, Andrius Utka, and Ligita Šarkutė. "Feature Exploration for Authorship Attribution of Lithuanian Parliamentary Speeches." In Text, Speech and Dialogue, 93–100. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-10816-2_12.

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Furkó, Péter B. "Discourse Markers from a Critical Perspective: A Case Study of Discourse Markers in Parliamentary Speeches." In Discourse Markers and Beyond, 91–116. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-37763-2_4.

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Derrin, Daniel. "Subtle Persuasions: The Memory of Bodily Experience as a Rhetorical Device in Francis Bacon’s Parliamentary Speeches." In Conjunctions of Mind, Soul and Body from Plato to the Enlightenment, 133–53. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-9072-7_8.

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Trmal, Jan, Aleš Pražák, Zdeněk Loose, and Josef Psutka. "Online TV Captioning of Czech Parliamentary Sessions." In Text, Speech and Dialogue, 416–22. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-15760-8_53.

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Bell, Ilona. "Early Days: Parliamentary Speech (1559) and the Woodstock Epigrams." In Elizabeth I, 45–64. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230107861_4.

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Bordel, Germán, Mikel Penagarikano, Luis Javier Rodríguez-Fuentes, and María Amparo Varona Fernández. "Aligning Very Long Speech Signals to Bilingual Transcriptions of Parliamentary Sessions." In Advances in Speech and Language Technologies for Iberian Languages, 69–78. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-35292-8_8.

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Atkinson, David. "Political Implicature in Parliamentary Discourse: an Analysis of Mariano Rajoy’s Speech on the 2006 Catalan Statute of Autonomy." In Spanish at Work, 130–45. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230299214_10.

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Sánchez-García, Francisco José. "Popular Culture in the Service of Populist Politics in Spain: Pablo Iglesias’ Parliamentary Speech as Leader of the Podemos Party." In When Politicians Talk, 239–55. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-3579-3_14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Parliamentary speeches"

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Mandravickaite, Justina, and Tomas Krilavičius. "Stylometric Analysis of Parliamentary Speeches: Gender Dimension." In Proceedings of the 6th Workshop on Balto-Slavic Natural Language Processing. Stroudsburg, PA, USA: Association for Computational Linguistics, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.18653/v1/w17-1416.

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Ramabhadran, Bhuvana, Olivier Siohan, and Abhinav Sethy. "The IBM 2007 speech transcription system for European parliamentary speeches." In 2007 IEEE Workshop on Automatic Speech Recognition & Understanding (ASRU). IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/asru.2007.4430158.

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Baum, Doris. "Topic-based speaker recognition for German parliamentary speeches." In Understanding (ASRU). IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/asru.2009.5372907.

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Herzog, Alexander, and Slava J. Mikhaylov. "Database of parliamentary speeches in Ireland, 1919–2013." In 2017 International Conference on the Frontiers and Advances in Data Science (FADS). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fads.2017.8253189.

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Helgadóttir, Inga Rún, Róbert Kjaran, Anna Björk Nikulásdóttir, and Jón Guðnason. "Building an ASR Corpus Using Althingi’s Parliamentary Speeches." In Interspeech 2017. ISCA: ISCA, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/interspeech.2017-903.

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Seman, Noraini, Zainab Abu Bakar, and Nordin Abu Bakar. "The optimization of Artificial Neural Networks connection weights using genetic algorithms for isolated spoken Malay parliamentary speeches." In 2010 International Conference on Computer and Information Application (ICCIA). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccia.2010.6141561.

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Lupu, Eugen, Anca Apatean, and Radu Arsinte. "Speaker diarization experiments for Romanian parliamentary speech." In 2015 International Symposium on Signals, Circuits and Systems (ISSCS). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/isscs.2015.7204023.

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Zhang, Justin Jian, Pascale Fung, and Ricky Ho Yin Chan. "Automatic minute generation for parliamentary speech using conditional random fields." In ICASSP 2011 - 2011 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icassp.2011.5947613.

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Iranzo-Sanchez, Javier, Joan Albert Silvestre-Cerda, Javier Jorge, Nahuel Rosello, Adria Gimenez, Albert Sanchis, Jorge Civera, and Alfons Juan. "Europarl-ST: A Multilingual Corpus for Speech Translation of Parliamentary Debates." In ICASSP 2020 - 2020 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icassp40776.2020.9054626.

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Seman, Noraini, Zainab Abu Bakar, Nordin Abu Bakar, Haslizatul Fairuz Mohamed, Nur Atiqah Sia Abdullah, Prasanna Ramakrisnan, and Sharifah Mumtazah Syed Ahmad. "Evaluating endpoint detection algorithms for isolated word from Malay parliamentary speech." In Knowledge Management (CAMP). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/infrkm.2010.5466898.

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