Arabic-L:LING:Journalistic Discourse Analysis Webinar from Saudi Linguistic Society

Dilworth Parkinson dilworthparkinson at GMAIL.COM
Sat Mar 9 00:00:26 UTC 2013


------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arabic-L: Fri 08 Mar 2013
Moderator: Dilworth Parkinson <dilworth_parkinson at byu.edu>
[To post messages to the list, send them to arabic-l at byu.edu]
[To unsubscribe, send message from same address you subscribed from to
listserv at byu.edu with first line reading:
           unsubscribe arabic-l                                      ]

-------------------------Directory------------------------------------

1) Subject:Journalistic Discourse Analysis Webinar from Saudi Linguistic
Society

-------------------------Messages-----------------------------------
1)
Date: 08 Mar 2013
From: Muhammad Alzaidi <mohd.zaidi2007 at gmail.com>
Subject:Journalistic Discourse Analysis Webinar from Saudi Linguistic
Society

Dear All,

Saudi Linguistic Society (SAL) is happy to announce its third webinar
entitled "Journalistic Discourse Analysis: Theoretical Model from Ideology
to Texts in the Example of Freedom of Expression in Egypt" By Dr. Ebtissam
Al Moshtohry. Attending the webinar is free and it will be on March 22 at
10.00 AM (KSA time Zone).However, places are limited. For more info and
registration, please see http://www.salsoc.com/home/sal-events-current/


*ABSTRACT:*

*

Recent contributions in Discourse Analysis and Textual Linguistics have
shone in excellent delineation of the relationship between text and
discourse in understanding their complexity and their complementarity. In
this regard, the current research is particularly interested in three
different orientations: 1. the General Theory of Text (Adam, 1990)
developed as part of the French School since 1990 and modified by myself in
2007; 2. the notion of Ideology as it has recently been defined by the
Anglo-Saxon School by adding our own perception; 3. the notions of
journalistic value and angle of view taken from Communication Sciences and
introduced for the first time in the fields of Discourse Analysis and
Textual Linguistics.The present research bases on a contrastive analysis of
the political news in both Arabic and French language newspapers in Egypt,
from 2000 to 2002, both in form and in content. Our work consists, thus, of
honing in on the most subtle linguistic clues in the texts of our corpus in
order not only to demonstrate the presence versus absence of constraints
but also to reveal the ideology dominant in each newspaper and to unravel
the reality concerning freedom of expression in Egypt.
*
For more info about Saudi Linguistic society (SAL), please see
http://www.salsoc.com/home/


Thank you!

Muhammad ALZAIDI

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
End of Arabic-L: 08 Mar 2013
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/arabic-l/attachments/20130308/01c07d87/attachment.htm>


More information about the Arabic-l mailing list