An Analysis of Language Use in the Tanzania's 2010 Pre-election Newspaper Headlines in the Swahili Press (original) (raw)

Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies Gricean implicature and election predictions: A case of the Zimbabwean 2008 election campaign

The article examines the nature of implicature realised in the election-prediction discourse in the Zimbabwean media. The focus is on how the print and electronic media, through its 'digestion' of news (Archakis & Tsakona, 2010), predicted the win or loss of political parties or candidates. The article shows how the media has been shaping public opinion in the run-up to the harmonised elections in Zimbabwe in 2008. In order to achieve this, the researcher employed the Gricean conceptualisation of implicature. It is argued that the cooperative principle and the suggested maxims are not observed during face-to-face conversation only. Taking into account the context of the newspaper, journalists are also expected to observe the cooperative principle and the maxims as they converse with the readers of their newspapers. Thus, the article examines how newspaper reporters try to be cooperative while at the same time aligning readers with a particular ideology and political party. The violation or flouting of the maxims has been observed in the newspaper reports as a strategy to shape public opinion, aligning the readers with a particular winning candidate.

Language and Political Messaging in Electoral Processes: A Literary Examination of Trends in Kenya’s 2022 and Uganda’s 2021 Elections

International journal of linguistics, literature and translation, 2022

Competitive politics is a game of numbers. Candidates often employ various strategies to secure victory. One of the strategies politicians employ is the meticulous use of language to give voters lofty promises and paint their opponents negatively while projecting themselves as messiahs. This paper argues that Language and Literature play critical roles in electoral processes. The two disciplines are conjoined twins in political campaign messaging as they shape opinions in specific predetermined ways by manipulating information and delivering it in an informative, targeted, and exciting manner. This area is yet to be subjected to extensive research to establish the nexus between Literature and Linguistics and communicative approaches deployed by competing groups. The paper interrogates the extent to which opposing political campaigns in Kenya and Uganda exploited strategic communication, mainly linguistic and literary resources, to give impetus to their campaigns. Specifically, we study the slogans and other targeted messages used to gain an advantage over opponents. This exploratory study seeks to ramp up interdisciplinary collaboration between Political Science, Literature and Linguistics. The study commences by discussing the place of strategic communication in political campaigns and the consequent connection between Linguistics and Literature. The paper proceeds to discuss the methodology employed in data collection, analysis and findings of the study. The paper concludes by pointing out opportunities for future research.

Conversationalization of Discourse in Tell and The News' Representation of Nigerian General Elections

Existing studies on media representation of elections in Nigeria did not pay adequate attention to a critical linguistic perspective on language used in reporting electoral matters. Such studies have not really examined how such ideologies could be accounted for using discourse features. Given the fact that ideologies are very crucial in elections, this study investigates the ways the cover stories in two Nigerian news magazines, Tell and The News, conversationalise the ideological pursuits of social actors in the 2003 and 2007 general elections in Nigeria. Fairclough's model on discourse is adopted as theoretical framework. The discourse patterns that expressed ideological pursuits in the reports were generally non-neutral. The analysis shows that both magazines adopted the radical and pragmatic approaches to pattern the quotation sequence as Quoted-Process-Sayer to discursively shape the readers' perceptions, and authenticate claims. The discourse of the stories indicated an attempt to shape the perspective of readers in elections; the magazines held the view that they are responsible for the social orientation of the electorate.

A Rhetorical Analysis of the Presidential Election Campaign Discourse in Zambia

The International Journal of Humanities & Social Studies, 2020

Language is considered as a purely human and non-instinctive method of expressing feelings and yearnings by way of a system of freely produced symbols (Sapir, 1939). The noticeable role of language in the life of every human being and the society as a whole cannot be underestimated or over emphasised. This is because language is used as a medium of serenity, persuasion and advancement on one hand and a medium of uproar, disorder and retrogression on another hand. The present study focuses on a significant form of political discourse, the election campaigns. The term politics is from Greek: πολιτικός politikos, which denotes "of, for, or relating to citizens," in the course of making decisions pertaining to all members of each group (James, 2014). In a narrow way, the concept designates to accomplishing and exercising positions of governance, that is, organised control over a human community, especially a state. Furthermore, politics is the practice of the dispersion of power and resources within a given community as well as the interrelationship(s) between communities (James, 2014). Essentially, the study analyses political discourse. Johnson and Johnson (2000) explain political discourse analysis as the arena of discourse analysis which centres on discourse in political forums such as debates, speeches, and hearings as the phenomenon of interest. The main objective of the present study is to analyse rhetorical strategies in presidential campaign discourse in Zambia, and the study makes use of SFG as the framework guiding the study. Since the introduction of multi-party politics in Zambia in 1991, several political parties have been competing for political power. In Zambia, general elections are held every five years. These elections are preceded by rigorous political campaigns by different political parties characterised by all sorts of language as politicians solicit for votes. What matters in order to be understood during these campaigns, is not what politicians say, but rather how they present what they say. During the run up to the August 11, 2016 elections, there were nine presidential candidates who were vying for presidency. However, the race was between two leading contenders-Hakainde Hichilema for the United Party for National Development (UPND) and Edgar Lungu for the Patriotic Front (PF). The study focuses on one of the two main contenders

Creation of Identities in Political Conflict: Kenya’s Newspaper Discourse

International Journal on Studies in English Language and Literature, 2016

This article looks into the construction of political identities in the discourse of two Kenyan newspaper headline stories covering the period of the Kenyan Coalition Government formed in 2008 to stem political conflict that arose after the disputed elections of 2007.It focuses on the two principals of the coalition government, President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga. Using a Critical Discourse Analysis(CDA) approach, the study analyses newspaper headline stories of the two leading newspapers in Kenya, Daily Nation and The Standard to gauge how the newspapers created identities for the two principals in the context of the political situation that existed then. The Prime Minister (PM) Raila Odinga is seen as a hero but also a victim of political forces. He is also evaluated as a peacemaker who quells conflicts brought about by his co-principal. President Kibaki, on the hand is depicted as an opportunist, anti-reformist and an ineffective leader. The newspapers exploit discourse strategies such as evaluative lexicon, structuring, schematic form and metaphor to create the identities and to persuade the audience to adopt a certain ideological stance.

A Corpus-Based Critical Discourse Analysis of Pre-2019 General Elections Reports in Selected Nigerian Newspapers

International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation

Generally, language experts believe that there are inherent ideologies in language use. The aspect of discourse study that discloses such ideologies is known as Critical Discourse Study (CDA). This paper seeks to exhume the various inherent ideologies that presuppose selected news reports on the Nigeria’s 2019 General Elections in Nigerian newspapers. This study is, however, corpus-based. Scholars have established that discourse is a kind of constructively conditioned public exercise. They believe that power relations exist at different levels of daily social interaction; revealing superiority or inferiority of interlocutors involved. News reports relating to the General Elections were electronically collated from the various newspaper platforms for a sizable language corpus. The name Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was selected and analysed purposively with the aid of Digital Humanities (DH) tool to observe the frequency of the acronym INEC and the textual context ...

Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies 'Game changer or another dummy': Media appraisals of government policies

Policies and/or constitutional provisions are a cornerstone for the development of a country. Varied language-related policies and constitutional acts have been crafted and/or amended in an effort to redress the language inequalities in Zimbabwe. The enactment of the new constitution in 2013 saw 16 languages accorded the status of officially recognised language. The media's role in publicising these constitutional provisions, and 'digesting' them for the heterogeneous audience, is vital for the development of the country. The article argues that subjectivities in the news reporting of a country's enactment of a new language policy are detrimental to the implementation, realisation and overall acceptance of the policy. The article employs the appraisal theoretical framework to examine the print media's evaluations of the Zimbabwean government's constitution. Major focus is on the print media appraisals of the Zimbabwean constitutional provisions and their implementation. Utilising the qualitative research paradigm, news reports from Zimbabwe's print media are purposively sampled. A discourse-analytic design is employed. The research concludes that even though they are other factors, the Zimbabwean print media, both independent and government, positively appreciated [+ve appreciation] the country's constitutional language provisions for the development of previously marginalised languages.

A Critical Discourse Analysis of Language in Ghanaian Newspaper Editorials

2020

The study explores the linguistic devices, approaches and styles in media discourse that are used to stake claims to knowledge, to influence attitudes and to promote critical thinking, among other functional roles of language. The study was equally interested in knowing the outcomes of the choice of these linguistic devices as far as communication is concerned. Linguistic devices such as modality, evaluative adjectives, adverbs, generic phrases, rhetoric and idioms among others, are used to state opinions, make predictions and influence attitudes. The study hypothesises that the study of language can be used in particular ways, so intended by the user, to achieve specific purposes. Eight different newspapers: The Daily Graphic, The Ghanaian Times, The Mirror, The Crusading Guide, The Insight, The Independent, The Catholic Standard and The Daily Guide, editorial excerpts were culled and used for the study of language use in newspaper editorials. The styles used and the reasons behind...

Representational Discourse in TV News Preludes in Kenya

The International Journal of Humanities & Social Studies

Media is a social and discursive institution which plays the role of regulating and organizing social life as well as producing social knowledge, values, and beliefs through linguistic means (Dijk, 1993a). Since there are many news outlets competing for the same audience, they aim at distinguishing themselves from one another through appealing to the public. What is often overlooked about the news is that the agencies producing them constitute businesses (Fowler, 1991). They too, promote and sell a product (that is the news) to the customers. A critical look at media discourse is necessary, considering that the increasingly influential role of the mass media does not necessarily pave way for more objective reporting. There is pressure that often influences choice of language that satisfies the desires of different social actors within the media. This pressure often manifests itself in the texts that appear in TV news preludes. The views expressed in them may reflect the political ideologies that the owners of the media house subscribe to. Fairclough (1995) observes that the media plays an active role in mediating and constructing discourse. It is therefore unrealistic to suppose that the media is neutral in its rendition of news as they would have their audience believe. The actual position is that the media exercises significant power in the social-political scene and seeks to regulate legitimacy issues. The power the media possesses is symbolic power in the sense that it can only influence its audience through persuasion. As Van Dijk (1995) observes, the media exercises a certain amount of mind control on its audience through its persuasive tact and suggests that mind control by the media is particularly effective when the media users do not realize the nature or the implications of such control. The persuasive power of the media is seen when the audience change their minds on their own free will, as when they accept news reports as true or journalistic opinions as legitimate or correct. News texts have great ideological significance in contemporary societies and this significance is vested in their production and dissemination by the media and their consumption by audiences (Thompson, 1995). It is for this reason that this paper focuses on the discursive strategies employed in news preludes to uncover the stances that point to bias in representation of reality. News preludes orient the story in a specific direction and form the lens through which the rest of the story is viewed. To do this, preludes make use of vocabulary that may be ideologically colored and other features of linguistic structure. The "spin" in the news preludes is meant to influence the way the viewers will view the rest of the news. They are presented in a way that will grab the listeners' attention and keep them glued to the station. Depending on the nature and newsworthiness of a news item, the prelude or the introductory commentary is formulated to express views that may variously reflect ideological stances of the news editors, TV station owners, the government or the political class. Here we find the application of one of the major persuasive to poi, commonly used in advertising, by which the message is validated, aimed at gaining favour of the audience. The discursive strategy of using everyday language mixed up with rhetorical figures of speech, linguistic devices such as word plays is a means of influencing public opinion-a persuasive media function. By implementing methodologies that influence and manipulate