Academic literature on the topic 'Speeches, addresses, etc., Polish American'

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Journal articles on the topic "Speeches, addresses, etc., Polish American"

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Rosinska, Olena. "Sex, Drugs, and Suicide in Youth-oriented TV Series of Different Countries: Controversial Content and the Level of Acceptability for a Sensitive Audience." Images. The International Journal of European Film, Performing Arts and Audiovisual Communication 37, no. 46 (2024): 93–107. https://doi.org/10.14746/i.2024.37.46.6.

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This article investigates the portrayals of acute problems faced by young people, a sensitive population category, in youth-oriented series available on various open media platforms, both international (such as Netflix, YouTube) and national ones (for example, Polsat Box Go, TVP, Megogo, Volia, Oll. tv, etc.). Additionally, the study aims to examine the censorship methods employed by national media platforms for media content targeting a highly sensitive youth audience. The research focuses on TV series for youth and adolescents as a specific genre of artistic and educational content that addresses significant personal and social issues while entertaining. This includes the Polish series Sexify (2021, 2022); the Ukrainian series First Swallows (2019, 2020), Sex, Insta and ZNO (2020), the Spanish web series Elite (2018); the British series Sex Education (2019); and the American series 13 Reasons Why (2017–2020), all of which are intended for viewers aged 16 and over. The Ukrainian series of The New One (2019) is not subject to detailed analysis but is mentioned for comparison and as an example available on the Netflix platform. The research addresses such issues as differing perceptions of youth-oriented series by representatives of different generations and the provision of certain behaviour models through media content.
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Leksyutina, Yana Valeryevna. "China in D. Trump’s Free and Open Indo-Pacific Strategy." Vestnik RUDN. International Relations 19, no. 1 (2019): 22–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2313-0660-2019-19-1-22-34.

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With Trump as a president of the US from January 2017 and his decisive actions, which have undermined many agreements reached by previous American administrations (like withdrawal from the TTP, the Paris climate agreement, the Iran nuclear deal, the UNESCO, etc.), the international system and regional subsystems are under serious reconfiguration and readjustments. This accentuates the necessity to systemize Trump’s actions and initiatives in the realm of foreign policy and foreign trade, to interpret these actions’ logic, and to evaluate the changes that Trump’s policies have brought about. It is of high importance to analyze Trump’s strategy in the Indo-Pacific which is the priority region in his foreign policy agenda and the region where two major threats to the US and its allies are coming from - the rise of China as a country that pursues unfair trade and economic policies and reveals assertiveness in securing its core interests, and the threat from the North Korea. The aim of the article is to analyze China’s place in Trump’s Indo-Pacific strategy. By studying American conceptual documents, Trump’s and other American high-level officials’ speeches, the article characterizes Trump’s free and open Indo-Pacific strategy, reveals its commonalities and peculiarities vis-à-vis Obama’s rebalancing to the Asia-Pacific strategy. The article also addresses the issue of Trump’s policies in the region on the economic front, because this is where Trump administration has introduces dramatic changes. Trump’s Indo-Pacific strategy is examined in the article in the context of its impact on the US-China relations. The relations between the two countries - without exaggeration, one of the most consequential for the world - may seriously deteriorate due to not only the evolving US-China trade war, but also contradictions between them over various issues in the IndoPacific region. The article analyzes the aggravation of tensions between the US and China in 2017-2018 over South and East China Seas, Taiwan issue, and North Korea issue.
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SUNKO, Nataliia, and Valeriia ILASH. "THE IMPLICIT CONTENT OF KAMALA HARRIS’S AND JOE BIDEN’S POLITICAL DISCOURSES." Germanic Philology Journal of Yuriy Fedkovych Chernivtsi National University, no. 850-851 (December 2, 2024): 139–46. https://doi.org/10.31861/gph2024.850-851.139-146.

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The speech of participants in any discourse, particularly political discourse, contains both explicit and implicit meanings. Political discourse is characterized by its ambiguity, making the correct interpretation of the messages conveyed by politicians — implicatures (“what is left unsaid”) — a challenging task. This requires the establishment of unwritten communicative rules according to which the speaker must avoid both excessive brevity and unnecessary verbosity. Still, politicians use implicatures as a strategy to influence the electorate, deliberately resorting to ambiguity in their speeches. However, this strategy does not always yield desired results, as the reactions within the discourse, particularly from the media and political circles, may distort the original meaning of what was said. This highlights the relevance of analyzing the implicit information derived from the political discourses of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris at various stages of their careers. The study examines quotations from their political speeches, addresses, and interviews, as well as the editorial content from the New York Times, The Washington Post, The Economist, and other leading American publications from 1987 to 2024. The theoretical foundation for the practical implementation of the research area is the theory of implicature proposed by English philosopher Herbert Paul Grice, who also formulated the principles of effective communication within the framework of the so-called Cooperative Principle. A harmonious synthesis of the maxims of the Cooperative Principle with implicit meanings is necessary for reaching mutual understanding between the speaker and the listener, which is particularly relevant for political discourse. As a result of the study, based on Grice’s theory of implicatures, violations of the maxims of the Cooperative Principle were analyzed in the political discourses of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. It was found that such violations, identified through stylistic devices (euphemisms, metaphors, allusions, hints, etc.), generate implicit meanings that influence the audience’s perception. The study demonstrated how Grice’s theory of implicatures is applied in real political communication contexts, based on context, background knowledge, and historical background, which contributes to the development of discourse analysis, pragmatics, and political linguistics, while also potentially finding practical applications in media analysis, critical thinking. and rhetoric.
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Ilić, Vladana. "The American Jeremiad: A Specifically American Genre." Issues in Ethnology and Anthropology 15, no. 4 (2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.21301/eap.v15i4.7.

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This paper offers an overview of a "specifically American genre" – the American jeremiad, whose origins lie in the Puritan political sermon and which, with certain historical and cultural modifications, exists to this day. This overview, like most studies of this rhetorical form, is based on the work of Sacvan Bercovitch, who established it as a genre and offered the most exhaustive interpretation of its structure and meaning to date. The American jeremiad aims to homogenize the American community, and to steer it towards a common national goal, as reflected in its three-part structure: an evocation of the ideal/the ideal state of the community, a denunciation of its current state, and an affirmation of the goal and a vision of progress. As, according to Bercovitch, the American jeremiad despite historical and social changes retains the cultural hegemony of the symbol of America, later studies have tested this thesis by looking at political speeches, public addresses, American films, etc., through the concepts of the contemporary secular jeremiad, historical, Afro-American, film jeremiads, etc., and almost without exception conclude that this symbol, in one form or another, is alive and well.
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Ilić, Vladana. "The American Jeremiad: A Specifically American Genre." Issues in Ethnology and Anthropology 15, no. 4 (2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.21301/eap.v15i4.7.

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This paper offers an overview of a "specifically American genre" – the American jeremiad, whose origins lie in the Puritan political sermon and which, with certain historical and cultural modifications, exists to this day. This overview, like most studies of this rhetorical form, is based on the work of Sacvan Bercovitch, who established it as a genre and offered the most exhaustive interpretation of its structure and meaning to date. The American jeremiad aims to homogenize the American community, and to steer it towards a common national goal, as reflected in its three-part structure: an evocation of the ideal/the ideal state of the community, a denunciation of its current state, and an affirmation of the goal and a vision of progress. As, according to Bercovitch, the American jeremiad despite historical and social changes retains the cultural hegemony of the symbol of America, later studies have tested this thesis by looking at political speeches, public addresses, American films, etc., through the concepts of the contemporary secular jeremiad, historical, Afro-American, film jeremiads, etc., and almost without exception conclude that this symbol, in one form or another, is alive and well.
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Davtyan, Elya. "HATE SPEECH IN AMERICAN AND ARMENIAN POLITICAL DISCOURSE/ԱՏԵԼՈՒԹՅԱՆ ԽՈՍՔԸ ԱՄԵՐԻԿՅԱՆ ԵՎ ՀԱՅԱՍՏԱՆՅԱՆ ՔԱՂԱՔԱԿԱՆ ԴԻՍԿՈՒՐՍՈՒՄ/ЯЗЫК ВРАЖДЫ В АМЕРИКАНСКОМ И АРМЯНСКОМ ПОЛИТИЧЕСКОМ ДИСКУРСЕ". Bulletin of Eurasia International University, 2022, 78–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.53614/18294952-2022.2-78.

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Hate speech is one of the basic concepts of linguistics and political rhetoric. In political speech, language expressions of hate speech are often decisive for the acceptance or rejection of the ideology and main theses of a politician’s. Since politics is mainly implemented through language: speeches, debates, addresses, etc., the linguistic manifestations of hate speech have a great deal of content and influence in them. The purpose of this study is to identify the main linguistic means of hate speech in American and Armenian political speech.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Speeches, addresses, etc., Polish American"

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Ip, Iao Kuan. "An examination of Chinese translations of lexical repetition in Obama's inaugural speech." Thesis, University of Macau, 2010. http://umaclib3.umac.mo/record=b2456362.

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Rush, Kyle Alexander. "Influence of the Presidential Inaugural Address on Audience Perceptions of Candidate Image and the State of the Nation." PDXScholar, 2017. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/3806.

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This study asks whether and how the presidential inaugural address influences American audiences. The current study explores how the 2017 Presidential Inaugural Address of Donald Trump influences audiences. Two areas were studied: Candidate image and the state of the nation. I hypothesized that participants who watched the address would have different attitudes regarding candidate image and the state of the nation compared to non-viewers. I also hypothesized that viewers of the address who voted for Donald Trump would respond differently to candidate image and the state of the nation when compared with those who did not vote for Trump. With one exception, none of the findings was significant. That is, attitudes of inaugural address viewers and non-viewers were similar, and attitudes of those who voted for the president and those who did not vote for the president were also similar. The exception was noted between those who voted for the candidate and oppositional voters: Those who voted for Donald Trump reported the nation is headed "in the right direction" while dissenters disagreed.
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Bajema, Hillary Ann Medhurst Martin J. "Islam as a rhetorical constraint the post-September 11th speaking of George W. Bush /." Waco, Tex. : Baylor University, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/2104/5096.

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Brown, Jacqueline Elaine. "Beguiling beginnings and dialectical salvaging the presidential inaugural speech and African American leaders' speeches /." 2004. http://etd.louisville.edu/data/UofL0062d2004.pdf.

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Sutherland, Joseph L. "Three essays on the study of nationalization with automated content analysis." Thesis, 2020. https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-wf0x-6k97.

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In three papers, I consider two questions of nationalization in American politics, and one question of the methodology necessary to study them. Nationalization is the process by which local politics become more like national politics on the basis of political issues and electoral engagement. It is usually measured using the difference in presidential and state-level electoral returns over time. To expand the study of nationalization, I use automated content analysis to derive new measures for the phenomenon’s study based on political text. In particular, I apply automated content analysis via latent dirichlet allocation to code for salient topics in text from national political agenda speech, local agenda speech, and state laws. The primary source for these local agenda codes is a novel database of State of the State addresses, which are like presidential State of the Union addresses, but are delivered by governors. I developed the database over the past seven years as part of this dissertation; it draws from all 50 States, and the earliest captured addresses date to the year 1893. The secondary sources for these codes are the State of the Union addresses and a corpus of laws passed by state legislatures. I utilize the codes from these naturally distinct text corpora to study the nationalization of the political agenda, and how nationalized elections relate to the production of salient laws. The comparison of naturally distinct texts, however, is problematic and requires further examination. To that end, the first paper, “A Theory and Method for Pooling Naturally Distinct Corpora” concerns the theory and method for why we should be able to use, pool, and compare the computer-generated codes from these naturally distinct text corpora to study nationalization. I propose a theoretical framework with which the researcher may defend the pooling of corpora, and introduce an empirical approach to testing for absolute comparability, the delta-statistic. While statistics like the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) and penalized log likelihood can help the researcher to determine if a model fits the pooled corpora better than the corpora separately, the delta-statistic relies on a strong theory of latent traits to evaluate the absolute quality of a pooled model. This is especially important when it is impossible to evaluate ground truth fit because some data are unlabeled. The second paper, “Have State Policy Agendas Become More Nationalized?” examines whether the nationalization of state policy agendas is related to the nationalization of gubernatorial elections. The analysis shows that State agendas, as laid out in the State of the State addresses, have become more similar to each other over time. It also shows that State agendas have become more similar to the national agenda, as laid out in the State of the Union addresses. Finally, I demonstrate an increasing relationship between the similarity in the agenda and the nationalization of elections. The findings suggest that the nationalization of the agenda is a significant and related factor to the nationalization of elections. The third paper, “Can States Govern Effectively When Politics Are Nationalized?” considers the question of whether electoral nationalization moderates the relationship between divided government and legislative productivity in the states. I find a null effect of divided government on salient lawmaking ability, and that nationalization of state legislatures has generally decreased the production of salient laws. The result holds even though nationalization is unrelated to the ability of our state governments to take action on salient issues during times of divided government. The findings suggest that behavioral factors driving lawmaker decisions may be more to blame for lawmaking defects than institutional ones. Taken together, the essays demonstrate the value of text analysis to the analysis of nationalization and other research topics in American politics.
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Mills, Elizabeth A. "A rhetorical critique of John McCain’s 2008 presidential concession address." 2010. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1607100.

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This thesis examines Senator John McCain’s concession address from the 2008 United States Presidential election campaign. McCain’s concession speech was significant because of his come-from-behind victory in the Republican primary, the favorable critical responses to his speech, and his response to the historic nature of a person of color winning the presidential election. This study is also significant because it contributes to the small body of literature that examines concession addresses. This study examined how well McCain’s concession speech demonstrated the qualities associated with the genre, if McCain’s concession functioned as a model speech, and whether McCain’s concession might signal an evolution of the genre. The method used to critique McCain’s concession was generic application, using a combined framework of Chesebro and Hamsher’s (1974) and Ritter and Howell’s (1974) characteristics of the concession genre. This method entailed applying the characteristics of the concession genre to McCain’s speech to determine if the artifact constitutes a strong example of the genre. The study found that McCain’s speech demonstrated qualities associated with the genre of concession speeches well, functioning as a model because he utilized rhetorical techniques that were uniquely successful for him, and that scholars and practitioners of should be flexible in their application of the genre constraints associated with concession speeches.<br>Department of Communication Studies
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Bergmaier, Michael J. "Reconceptualizing crisis : an exploration of the domestic crisis rhetoric genre across presidencies." 2011. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1639860.

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This thesis examines three case studies in presidential rhetoric in order to explore the genre of domestic crisis rhetoric as defined by Theodore O. Windt (1990). Windt (1986) notes the impressive scholarship on the rhetoric of war and international crises, but also laments the “neglect” of research into “equally significant speeches on domestic „crises,‟ especially those concerned with economic issues” (p. 104). Windt (1990) proposes a generic model that views domestic crisis rhetoric through a dialectic lens that explores how the discourse defines the president‟s policy and how it depicts the policy of the president‟s opponents. This study examines three of the most important presidential rhetorical texts on domestic issues of the last 50 years, each by a different president and each addressing a different domestic political issue – Barack Obama‟s September 9, 2009 address on health care reform, George W. Bush‟s September 19 and September 24, 2008 speeches on the financial crisis, and Lyndon Johnson‟s call for a “war on poverty” in his January 8, 1964 State of the Union address – with the goal of testing the generalizability of the genre across time and gaining a better understanding of how presidents respond to – and create – exigency through rhetoric.<br>Introduction and overview -- Literature review -- Method -- Barack Obama and health care reform -- George W. Bush and the financial crisis -- Lyndon Johnson and the "war on poverty" -- Conclusions.<br>Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only<br>Department of Communication Studies
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Wernicke, Rose. "The Farmland Opera House : culture, identity, and the corn contest." Thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/4663.

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Books on the topic "Speeches, addresses, etc., Polish American"

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Policy, United States Office of National Drug Control. Office of National Drug Control Policy: Speeches. Office of National Drug Control Policy, Executive Office of the President, 1996.

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Maureen, Harrison, and Gilbert Steve, eds. Landmark American speeches. Excellent Books, 2001.

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L, Johannesen Richard, ed. Contemporary American speeches. 9th ed. Kendall/Hunt Pub. Co., 2000.

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Michelle, Houle, ed. Immigration. Greenhaven Press, 2004.

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Twain, Mark. Speeches. Oxford University Press, 1996.

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Baird, Albert Craig. Representative American speeches 1986-1987. H.W. Wilson Co., 1987.

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Baird, Albert Craig. Representative American speeches 1986-1987. H.W. Wilson Co., 1987.

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1979-, Daley James, ed. Great speeches by American women. Dover Publications, 2008.

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Group, Educational Video, ed. Historical speeches through transcripts. Educational Video Group, 2000.

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Jasiński, Tomasz. Ad universitatem studiosorum: Wykłady inauguracyjne wygłoszone na uniwersytetach polskich w roku akademickim 2007/2008. Wydawn. Naukowe UAM, 2008.

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