Inception: How the Unsaid May Become Public Knowledge

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Inception : How the Unsaid May Become Public Knowledge. / Kock, Christian Erik J.

Rhetoric, Discourse and Knowledge. red. / Maria Załęska; Urszula Okulska. Frankfurt am Main : Peter Lang, 2016. s. 275-286 (Studies in Language, Culture and Society, Bind 9).

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kock, CEJ 2016, Inception: How the Unsaid May Become Public Knowledge. i M Załęska & U Okulska (red), Rhetoric, Discourse and Knowledge. Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main, Studies in Language, Culture and Society, bind 9, s. 275-286.

APA

Kock, C. E. J. (2016). Inception: How the Unsaid May Become Public Knowledge. I M. Załęska, & U. Okulska (red.), Rhetoric, Discourse and Knowledge (s. 275-286). Peter Lang. Studies in Language, Culture and Society Bind 9

Vancouver

Kock CEJ. Inception: How the Unsaid May Become Public Knowledge. I Załęska M, Okulska U, red., Rhetoric, Discourse and Knowledge. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. 2016. s. 275-286. (Studies in Language, Culture and Society, Bind 9).

Author

Kock, Christian Erik J. / Inception : How the Unsaid May Become Public Knowledge. Rhetoric, Discourse and Knowledge. red. / Maria Załęska ; Urszula Okulska. Frankfurt am Main : Peter Lang, 2016. s. 275-286 (Studies in Language, Culture and Society, Bind 9).

Bibtex

@inbook{a811f6ca300741d18bd8c4e142724325,
title = "Inception: How the Unsaid May Become Public Knowledge",
abstract = "The paper uses H.P. Grice{\textquoteright}s concept of conversational implicature, and concepts based on Gricean thinking, in a rhetorical analysis of several passages in President George W. Bush{\textquoteright}s speeches prior to the invasion of Iraq. It is suggested that the passages in question, along with many others, were apt to suggest to audiences something that Bush never asserted and ostensibly denied, namely that he believed Saddam Hussein to have been complicit in the 9/11 terrorist acts. Three types of suggestive mechanism are analyzed. They are offered as examples of rhetorical devices used in political communication that may create a kind of “public knowledge” that has not been asserted, supported with reasons, or reflected upon.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Conversational implicature, political communication, George W. Bush, suggestion, Saddam, 9/11, fuzzy reference, sentence collocation",
author = "Kock, {Christian Erik J}",
year = "2016",
month = nov,
day = "1",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783631668160",
series = "Studies in Language, Culture and Society",
publisher = "Peter Lang",
pages = "275--286",
editor = "Maria Za{\l}{\c e}ska and Okulska, {Urszula }",
booktitle = "Rhetoric, Discourse and Knowledge",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Inception

T2 - How the Unsaid May Become Public Knowledge

AU - Kock, Christian Erik J

PY - 2016/11/1

Y1 - 2016/11/1

N2 - The paper uses H.P. Grice’s concept of conversational implicature, and concepts based on Gricean thinking, in a rhetorical analysis of several passages in President George W. Bush’s speeches prior to the invasion of Iraq. It is suggested that the passages in question, along with many others, were apt to suggest to audiences something that Bush never asserted and ostensibly denied, namely that he believed Saddam Hussein to have been complicit in the 9/11 terrorist acts. Three types of suggestive mechanism are analyzed. They are offered as examples of rhetorical devices used in political communication that may create a kind of “public knowledge” that has not been asserted, supported with reasons, or reflected upon.

AB - The paper uses H.P. Grice’s concept of conversational implicature, and concepts based on Gricean thinking, in a rhetorical analysis of several passages in President George W. Bush’s speeches prior to the invasion of Iraq. It is suggested that the passages in question, along with many others, were apt to suggest to audiences something that Bush never asserted and ostensibly denied, namely that he believed Saddam Hussein to have been complicit in the 9/11 terrorist acts. Three types of suggestive mechanism are analyzed. They are offered as examples of rhetorical devices used in political communication that may create a kind of “public knowledge” that has not been asserted, supported with reasons, or reflected upon.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Conversational implicature

KW - political communication

KW - George W. Bush

KW - suggestion

KW - Saddam

KW - 9/11

KW - fuzzy reference

KW - sentence collocation

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9783631668160

T3 - Studies in Language, Culture and Society

SP - 275

EP - 286

BT - Rhetoric, Discourse and Knowledge

A2 - Załęska, Maria

A2 - Okulska, Urszula

PB - Peter Lang

CY - Frankfurt am Main

ER -

ID: 169101389