[Linganth] Query from a student looking for resources on the way "terrorist" is used in everyday discourse
Colleen Cotter
c.m.cotter at qmul.ac.uk
Fri Feb 10 20:50:33 UTC 2017
I have a student who is doing a similar project -- looking at when "terrorist" is used or when the "loner" label or mental health diagnosis predominates -- and comparing usage across different media (tabloid vs. broadsheet) and stories. Reference to the killer of British MP Jo Cox, for instance, was initially to his mental health and later to terrorism. She is also noticing how "hate crime" is another label. (Jo Cox's family refer to her murder as a hate crime, and not an act of terrorism, for instance.) I don't have the reference handy, but Rae Moses wrote a short chapter about the language of hate some years ago which students find useful. Anyway -- I'll pass along your email, Sonya, and perhaps the two of them can confer.
Colleen
==================================
Dr. Colleen Cotter
Linguistics Department
School of Languages, LInguistics and Film
Queen Mary University of London
Mile End Road
London E1 4NS
UK
email: c.m.cotter at qmul.ac.uk
________________________________
From: Linganth <linganth-bounces at listserv.linguistlist.org> on behalf of Pritzker, Sonya <sonya.pritzker at ua.edu>
Sent: Friday, February 10, 2017 5:27 PM
To: LINGANTH at listserv.linguistlist.org
Subject: [Linganth] FW: Query from a student looking for resources on the way "terrorist" is used in everyday discourse
From: "Pritzker, Sonya" <sonya.pritzker at ua.edu<mailto:sonya.pritzker at ua.edu>>
Date: Wednesday, February 8, 2017 at 4:27 PM
To: Linguistic Anthropology Discussion Group <LINGANTH at listserv.linguistlist.org<mailto:LINGANTH at listserv.linguistlist.org>>
Subject: Query from a student looking for resources on the way "terrorist" is used in everyday discourse
Hi All,
I have an undergrad student taking my Language & Culture class, and she sent me the following query:
"I am really interested in doing research on the ramifications of using the word terrorism and how different actors use that word to designate certain groups as terrorists. Let me know if there is anything more i could look into or if this not something linguistic anthropology would deal with."
I’ve pointed her to social media and the news, and will meet with her to discuss other options. But I was wondering if anyone here could recommend any materials that she could read on the topic.
Thanks!
Sonya
Sonya Pritzker, Ph.D., Assistant Professor
University of Alabama, Department of Anthropology
350 Marr’s Spring Rd. Tuscaloosa AL 35401
(205) 348-6554 (office)
(805) 574-0091 (mobile)
http://spritzker.people.ua.edu
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