Startsida
Hjälp
Sök i LIBRIS databas

     

 

Sökning: onr:19983400 > Language, Normativi...

Language, Normativity and Europeanisation Discursive Evidence from the Eurovision Song Contest / by Heiko Motschenbacher.

Motschenbacher, Heiko. (författare)
SpringerLink (Online service) 
ISBN 9781137563019
Publicerad: London : Palgrave Macmillan UK : 2016
Engelska XVII, 384 p. 6 illus. in color.
Serie: Postdisciplinary Studies in Discourse
  • E-bok
Innehållsförteckning Sammanfattning Ämnesord
Stäng  
  • Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: The Communicative Setting of the Eurovision Song Contest (ESC) -- Chapter 3: The Language-Identity-Normativity Interface and Critical Discourse Studies -- Chapter 4: Language Choice Practices in the ESC -- Chapter 5: Code-Switching Practices in ESC Performances -- Chapter 6: The Linguistic Construction of Europeanness, Nationalism and Sexuality in ESC Performances -- Chapter 7: Multimodal Identity Construction in ESC Performances -- Chapter 8: Prevalent Discourses in ESC Lyrics -- Chapter 9: Overview.
  • This book focuses on linguistic practices of identity construction in a popular culture media context, the Eurovision Song Contest. Subscribing to a normativity-based approach to critical discourse analysis, it studies Europeanisation as it surfaces at the discursive interface of European, national and sexual identities in Eurovision lyrics and performances. Research in critical discourse analysis that deals with Europeanisation, or the discursive work involved in European identity formation, has so far mainly studied data from EU political contexts that illustrate a top-down approach to what Europeanness means. The present book complements this earlier research in several ways, focusing on the linguistic construction of identities, and its interrelation with non-linguistic modes of signification in the Eurovision Song Contest. Discursive mechanisms that prove to be central for the normative shifts of Europeanisation in the given context are de-essentialisation, inclusion, camp, crossing and languaging. Heiko Motschenbacher is a lecturer at Goethe-University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany, where he completed his PhD and post-doc research. He has held temporary professorships of English Linguistics at universities in Bayreuth, Siegen, Braunschweig and Mainz. He is founder and co-editor of the Journal of Language and Sexuality (with William L. Leap). Among his recent publications are the monographs Language, Gender and Sexual Identity: Poststructuralist Perspectives (2010), An Interdisciplinary Bibliography on Language, Gender and Sexuality (2000–2011) (2012), and New Perspectives on English as a European Lingua Franca (2013). He has co-edited a special issue of the journal Discourse & Society on Queer Linguistic Approaches to Discourse (2013, with Martin Stegu) and the fourth volume of Gender Across Languages: The Linguistic Representation of Women and Men (2015, with Marlis Hellinger). 

Ämnesord

Linguistics.  (LCSH)
Sociolinguistics.  (LCSH)
Discourse analysis.  (LCSH)
Sociology.  (LCSH)
Communication.  (LCSH)
Sex (Psychology).  (LCSH)
Gender expression.  (LCSH)
Gender identity.  (LCSH)
Culture  -- Study and teaching. (LCSH)
Linguistics. 
Discourse Analysis. 
Sociolinguistics. 
Regional and Cultural Studies. 
Gender Studies. 
Communication Studies. 

Klassifikation

P302-P302.87 (LCC)
LAN009030 (ämneskategori)
401.41 (DDC)
F.064 (kssb/8 (machine generated))
Inställningar Hjälp

Titeln finns på 5 bibliotek. 

Bibliotek i norra Sverige (1)

Ange som favorit

Bibliotek i Mellansverige (1)

Ange som favorit

Bibliotek i Stockholmsregionen (2)

Ange som favorit

Bibliotek i västra Sverige (1)

Ange som favorit
Om LIBRIS
Sekretess
Hjälp
Fel i posten?
Kontakt
Teknik och format
Sök utifrån
Sökrutor
Plug-ins
Bookmarklet
Anpassa
Textstorlek
Kontrast
Vyer
LIBRIS söktjänster
SwePub
Uppsök

Kungliga biblioteket hanterar dina personuppgifter i enlighet med EU:s dataskyddsförordning (2018), GDPR. Läs mer om hur det funkar här.
Så här hanterar KB dina uppgifter vid användning av denna tjänst.

Copyright © LIBRIS - Nationella bibliotekssystem

 
pil uppåt Stäng

Kopiera och spara länken för att återkomma till aktuell vy