"Minister, we will see how the public judges you.'': Media references in political interviews

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"Minister, we will see how the public judges you.'' : Media references in political interviews. / Fetzer, Anita.

In: Journal of Pragmatics, Vol. 38, No. 2, 01.02.2006, p. 180-195.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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@article{2457187c89ed40c5929a44daaf2a4894,
title = "{"}Minister, we will see how the public judges you.'': Media references in political interviews",
abstract = "This contribution investigates political interviews from a sociopragmatic angle and defines them as negotiating validity claims with regard to the first-frame interaction of interviewer and interviewee, and with regard to the second- or media-frame interaction consisting of the first-frame (interviewer, interviewee) interacting with the media frame. Section 1 examines a political interview's dual status as a communicative genre and as a media event by accounting for interfacing frames, constitutive multi-frame interactions and multiple discourse identities. Section 2 discusses the linguistic representation of media references, such as TV, program, institutional roles of interviewer, interviewee and audience, and investigates when, where and how the references are realized and which communicative function(s) they fulfill. In unmarked interviews, explicit references to the media frame are restricted to the opening and closing sections. If employed in the topical-sequence section, they may either function as securing the common ground between the first-frame and second-frame interactants, or they may be exploited in order to communicate conversationally implicated meaning, such as boosting the pragmatic force of a challenge or expressing criticism. In conclusion, media references have the communicative function of (1) initiating the opening and closing sections of the political interview, and of (2) intensifying the pragmatic force of a communicative contribution thus indirectly guiding the audience in their process of calculating the interviewer's and interviewee's communicative intentions. {\textcopyright} 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.",
keywords = "English, political interview, media communication, Validity claim",
author = "Anita Fetzer",
note = "Part of special issue: Special Issue: Pragmatic Aspects of Political Discourse in the Media, Edited by Anita Fetzer, Elda Weizman",
year = "2006",
month = feb,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.pragma.2005.06.017",
language = "English",
volume = "38",
pages = "180--195",
journal = "Journal of Pragmatics",
issn = "0378-2166",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - "Minister, we will see how the public judges you.''

T2 - Media references in political interviews

AU - Fetzer, Anita

N1 - Part of special issue: Special Issue: Pragmatic Aspects of Political Discourse in the Media, Edited by Anita Fetzer, Elda Weizman

PY - 2006/2/1

Y1 - 2006/2/1

N2 - This contribution investigates political interviews from a sociopragmatic angle and defines them as negotiating validity claims with regard to the first-frame interaction of interviewer and interviewee, and with regard to the second- or media-frame interaction consisting of the first-frame (interviewer, interviewee) interacting with the media frame. Section 1 examines a political interview's dual status as a communicative genre and as a media event by accounting for interfacing frames, constitutive multi-frame interactions and multiple discourse identities. Section 2 discusses the linguistic representation of media references, such as TV, program, institutional roles of interviewer, interviewee and audience, and investigates when, where and how the references are realized and which communicative function(s) they fulfill. In unmarked interviews, explicit references to the media frame are restricted to the opening and closing sections. If employed in the topical-sequence section, they may either function as securing the common ground between the first-frame and second-frame interactants, or they may be exploited in order to communicate conversationally implicated meaning, such as boosting the pragmatic force of a challenge or expressing criticism. In conclusion, media references have the communicative function of (1) initiating the opening and closing sections of the political interview, and of (2) intensifying the pragmatic force of a communicative contribution thus indirectly guiding the audience in their process of calculating the interviewer's and interviewee's communicative intentions. © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

AB - This contribution investigates political interviews from a sociopragmatic angle and defines them as negotiating validity claims with regard to the first-frame interaction of interviewer and interviewee, and with regard to the second- or media-frame interaction consisting of the first-frame (interviewer, interviewee) interacting with the media frame. Section 1 examines a political interview's dual status as a communicative genre and as a media event by accounting for interfacing frames, constitutive multi-frame interactions and multiple discourse identities. Section 2 discusses the linguistic representation of media references, such as TV, program, institutional roles of interviewer, interviewee and audience, and investigates when, where and how the references are realized and which communicative function(s) they fulfill. In unmarked interviews, explicit references to the media frame are restricted to the opening and closing sections. If employed in the topical-sequence section, they may either function as securing the common ground between the first-frame and second-frame interactants, or they may be exploited in order to communicate conversationally implicated meaning, such as boosting the pragmatic force of a challenge or expressing criticism. In conclusion, media references have the communicative function of (1) initiating the opening and closing sections of the political interview, and of (2) intensifying the pragmatic force of a communicative contribution thus indirectly guiding the audience in their process of calculating the interviewer's and interviewee's communicative intentions. © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

KW - English

KW - political interview

KW - media communication

KW - Validity claim

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=29944434206&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/c8ac23b4-bd59-3c35-b563-d2741d9f8628/

U2 - 10.1016/j.pragma.2005.06.017

DO - 10.1016/j.pragma.2005.06.017

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 38

SP - 180

EP - 195

JO - Journal of Pragmatics

JF - Journal of Pragmatics

SN - 0378-2166

IS - 2

ER -