Linguistic markers of involvement in American broadcast politics. A case study on TV political interviews


Abstract


This paper investigates the phenomenon of involvement in American TV political interviews. The dataset used to carry out the study consists of a corpus of interviews with American leading politicians aired on the most popular US Sunday morning talk shows within a time span of nine years, from 2010 to 2019. Comparisons are made with another synchronic corpus of American TV interviews coming from the entertaining talk show Charlie Rose featuring personalities who discuss different issues such as technology, science, the film industry, etc. Corpus linguistics methods are exploited to describe verbal traits associated with involvement in American political interviews, as compared to entertaining-oriented talk show interviews. Therefore, this study ascertains whether, and in which ways, the usage of linguistic involvement characterizes the genre of political interviews.

 


DOI Code: 10.1285/i22390359v36p315

Keywords: political interviews; linguistic involvement; TV-mediated language; corpus linguistics; American English.

References


Ädel A. 2008, Involvement Features in Writing, in Gaëtanelle G., Papp S. and Diez-Bedmar M.B. (eds.), Linking up Contrastive and Learner Corpus Research, Rodopi, Amsterdam/New York, pp. 35-53.

Barbieri F. 2015, Involvement in University Classroom Discourse: Register Variation and Interactivity, in “Applied Linguistics” 36 [2], pp. 151-173.

Bednarek M. 2014, Involvement in Australian Talkback Radio: A Corpus Linguistic Investigation, in “Australian Journal of Linguistics” 34 [1], pp. 4-23.

Besnier N. 1994, Involvement in Linguistic Practice: An Ethnographic Appraisal, in “Journal of Pragmatics” 22, pp. 279-299.

Biber D. 1988, Variation across Speech and Writing, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Biber D., Johansson S., Leech G., Conrad S. and Finegan E. 1999, Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English, Longman, Harlow.

Bonsignori V. 2009, Transcribing Film Dialogue: From orthographic to Prosodic Transcription, in Freddi M. and Pavesi M. (eds.), Analysing Audiovisual Dialogue. Linguistic and Translational Insights, CLUEB, Bologna, pp. 185-200.

Bruti S. 2016, Gender-related Communication in Political Interviews: A Multimodal Analysis in Meaning-making in the Obama/Clinton Interview of 2013, in Bonsignori V. and Crawford Camiciottoli B. (eds.), Multimodality Across Communicative Settings, Discourse Domains and Genres, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Newcastle Upon Tyne, pp. 166-188.

Chafe W.L. 1982, Integration and Involvement in Speaking, Writing, and Oral Literature, in Tannen D. (ed.), Spoken and Written Language: Exploring Orality and Literacy, Norwood, Ablex, pp. 35-53.

Chafe W.L. 1985, Linguistic Differences Produced by Differences between Speaking and Writing, in Olson D.R., Torrance N. and Hildyard A. (eds.), Literacy, Language, and Learning: The Nature and Consequences of Reading and Writing, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 105-123.

Ekström M. and Lundell Å. 2010, Beyond “the Broadcast Interview”: Specialized Forms of Interviewing in the Making of Television News, in “Journalism Studies” 12 [2], pp. 172-187.

Fairclough N. and Wodak R. 1997, Critical Discourse Analysis, in van Dijk T.A. (ed.), Discourse as Social Interaction Vol.2. Discourse Studies: A Multidisciplinary Introduction, Sage Publishing, London, pp. 258-284.

Fetzer A. 2014, I Think, I Mean and I Believe in Political Discourse: Collocates, Functions and Distribution, in “Functions of Language” 21 [1], pp. 67-94.

Furkó P. 2017, Manipulative Uses of Pragmatic Markers in Political Discourse, in “Palgrave Commun” 3. https://doi.org/10.1057/palcomms.2017.54 (23.1.2020).

Furkó P. and Ágnes A. 2014, English Discourse Markers in Mediatised Political Interviews, in “Brno Studies in English” 40 [1], pp. 45-64.

Goffman E. 1963, Behavior in Public places: Notes on the Social Organization of Gatherings, Free Press, New York.

Gumperz J. 1982, Discourse Strategies, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Jucker A. 1986, News Interviews: A Pragmalinguistic Analysis, Gieben, Amsterdam.

Kilgarriff A., Baisa V., Bušta J., Jakubíček M., Kovář V., Michelfeit J., Rychlý P. and Suchomel V. 2014, The Sketch Engine: Ten Years on, in “Lexicography” 1 [1], pp. 7-36.

Lauerbach G. 2007, Argumentation in Political Talk Show Interviews, in “Journal of Pragmatics” 39 [3], pp. 1388-1419.

Leech G., Rayson P. and Wilson A. 2001, Word Frequencies in Written and Spoken English, Pearson Education, Harlow.

Levinson S.C. 1983, Pragmatics, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Lotz A. 2018, We Now Disrupt This Broadcast: How Cable Transformed Television and the Intern

et Revolutionized it All, MIT Press, Cambridge Massachussets.

Montgomery M. 2007, The Discourse of Broadcast News, Routledge, London.

Partington A. 2004, Corpora and Discourse, a Most Congruous Beast, in Partington A., Morley J. and Haarman L. (eds.), Corpora and Discourse, Peter Lang, Bern, pp. 11-20.

Quaglio P. 2009, Television Dialogue: The Sitcom Friends vs. Natural Conversation, John Benjamins, Amsterdam/Philadelphia.

Schiffrin D. 1987, Discourse Markers, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Tannen D. 1984, Conversational Style: Analysing Talk among Friends, Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Tannen D. 2007, Talking Voices, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Vignozzi G. 2019, Assessing the Language of TV Political Interviews: A Corpus Assisted Perspective, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Newcastle Upon Tyne.


Full Text: pdf

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribuzione - Non commerciale - Non opere derivate 3.0 Italia License.