Theme Session on Meaning Construction in Critical Discourse Analysis

Koller, Veronika v.koller at LANCASTER.AC.UK
Sat Oct 13 00:28:20 UTC 2007


Dear Chris,
I am definitely planning to submit a paper for CADAAD, and am particularly intrigued by the panel below. However, why the exclusive focus on *political* discourse? I apprecate that CDA is traditionally linked to the study of political discourse but as you are aware, colleagues are working on a host of areas, including, e.g., educational and corporate discourses. Any chance of broadening the scope of the panel somewhat?
 
Best regards,
Veronika

________________________________

From: TheDiscourseStudiesList on behalf of Christopher Hart
Sent: Fri 12/10/2007 16:11
To: DISCOURS at LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG
Subject: CFP: Theme Session on Meaning Construction in Critical Discourse Analysis



Dear all,

This call for papers is for a theme session at CADAAD'08. For full
conference details visit http://cadaad.org/cadaad08

Chair: Christopher Hart (University of Hertfordshire) and Dominik Lukes
(University of East Anglia)

Critical discourse analysis (CDA) identifies three analytic stages:
description, interpretation and explanation. Halliday's systemic
functional linguistics has become synonymous with description-stage
analysis of representation in text. And at the explanation stage, CDA is
associated with Marxism and Critical Theory. Very little work, however,
has been carried out at the interpretation stage, which is concerned
with discourse processing. Discourse processing, of course, involves
meaning construction as understood in cognitive linguistics or cognitive
pragmatics. Cognitive linguistics is a broad paradigm subsuming a number
of distinct theories and thus offering a range of potential analytical
tools to CDA. But whilst CDA has made use of conceptual metaphor theory,
it has not recognised cognitive linguistic approaches to discourse and
the input they provide at the interpretation-stage. Similarly, cognitive
approaches to pragmatics have not been recognised in CDA.

This methodologically-oriented session then, invites papers addressing
meaning construction in political text and discourse from the
perspectives of cognitive linguistics and cognitive pragmatics. As such,
papers applying conceptual blending theory, construction grammar,
discourse space theory, frame negotiation, mental space theory or
relevance theory, for example, are particularly welcome.

Please send abstracts of no longer than 400 words to
c.j.hart at herts.ac.uk <mailto:c.j.hart at herts.ac.uk> by *30 November
2007*. Authors should include their name, affiliation and email address.
Successful authors will be notified via email by *15 February 2008*.

Kind regards,
Christopher Hart


--
Christopher Hart
Lecturer in English Language and Communication
School of Humanities
University of Hertfordshire

www.hartcda.org.uk



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