Archive for 2017

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[ecrea] New issue: Journal of Language and Politics

Fri Jun 16 22:53:58 GMT 2017



New issue: Journal of Language and Politics
˙
Editor-in-Chief:  Michał Krzyzanowski
University of Liverpool
Editors: David Machin and Ruth Wodak
Örebro University / Lancaster University & University Vienna
Assistant Editor: Sam Bennett
Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan

The Journal of Language and Politics (JLP) represents an interdisciplinary and critical forum for analysing and discussing the various dimensions in the interplay between language and politics. It locates at the intersection of several social science disciplines including communication and media research, linguistics, discourse studies, political science, political sociology or political psychology. It focuses mainly on the empirically-funded research on the role of language and wider communication in all social processes and dynamics that can be deemed as political. Its focus is therefore not limited to the ’institutional’ field of politics or to the traditional channels of political communication but extends to a wide range of social fields, actions and media (incl. traditional and online) where political and politicised ideas are linguistically and discursively constructed and communicated.

The Journal of Language and Politics publishes its articles Online First.
issn 1569-2159 2 e-issn 1569-9862


Special issue of Journal of Language and Politics 16:4 (2017)

Right-Wing Populism in Europe & USA Contesting Politics & Discourse beyond ‘Orbanism’ and ‘Trumpism’
Edited by Ruth Wodak and Michał Krzyzanowski
Lancaster University & University of Vienna / University of Liverpool


Table of contents
Right-Wing Populism in Europe & USA: Contesting Politics & Discourse beyond ‘Orbanism’ and ‘Trumpism’
Ruth Wodak and Michał Krzyzanowski
Radical right-wing parties in Europe: What’s populism got to do with it?
Jens Rydgren
Right-wing populism and market-fundamentalism: Two mutually reinforcing threats to democracy in the 21st century
Walter Ötsch and Stephan Pühringer
Social Media and the Cordon Sanitaire: Populist politics, the online space, and a relationship that just isn’t there
Mark Littler and Matthew Feldman
Discourse theory in populism research: Three challenges and a dilemma
Yannis Stavrakakis
Populist discourses in the Hungarian public sphere: From right to left (and Beyond)?
Erzsébet Barát
The “Establishment”, the “Élites”, and the “People”: Who’s who?
Ruth Wodak
Uncivility on the Web: Populism in/and the Borderline Discourses of Exclusion ˙
Michał Krzyzanowski and Per Ledin
“The people” in populist discourse: Using neuro-cognitive linguistics to understand political meanings
Paul Chilton
The hollow man: Donald Trump, populism, and post-truth politics
Robin Tolmach Lakoff
The “Tweet Politics” of President Trump
Ramona Kreis
Post-truth politics? Authenticity, populism and the electoral discourses of Donald Trump
Martin Montgomery



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