Synopses & Reviews
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Synopsis
Communicating Conflict brings together a collection of multilingual case studies drawn from the international media. The contributors use methodologies drawn from Critical Discourse Analysis and Systemic Functional Linguistics to explore how these texts o
Synopsis
A collection of multilingual case studies drawn from the international media, which uses various methodologies to examine the reporting of conflict around the world.
Table of Contents
1. The news story as rhetoric: P R R White (University of Adelaide, Australia) and Elizabeth Thomson (University of Wollongong, Australia)
I: Conflict between Nation States2. Variation in 'reporter voice': Annabelle Lukin (Macquarie University, Australia)3. Evaluating 'reporter voice': Elizabeth Thomson (University of Wollongong, Australia) and Nagisa Fukui (University of New South Wales, Australia)4. America's War on Terror: a Vietnamese perspective: Tran Thi Hong Van5. Symbolising ideology: Motoki Sano6. Ideologically opposed news stories: Alice Caffarel (University of Sydney, Australia)7. Debating Taiwanese authorities in the Chinese media: Edward McDonald8. Australian and Indonesian reporting of military clashes in Indonesia: Ari Poespodihardjo and Philip Kitley
II: Conflict within Nation States9. Construing death in the Thai media: John Knox (Macquarie University, Australia) and Pattama Patpong (Macquarie University, Australia)10. 'Reporter voice' in the reporting of conflict in Finland: Maj-Britt Hoglund11. Evaluation in news images: comparative studies of the detention of refugees: Dorothy EconomouIndex