Abstract

Discourse analysis is a branch of study that encompasses a variety of varied, primarily qualitative methods to the investigation of the interactions that exist between language in use and the social environment. Language is often viewed by researchers in the subject as a sort of social practice that has an impact on the social world and vice versa. Many contemporary kinds of discourse analysis have been overtly or indirectly informed by Michel Foucault's theories of power, knowledge, and discourse, which are discussed below. As a result of Foucault's work, there has been an increased interest in investigating the role that language plays in the formation and maintenance of certain knowledge and the maintenance of inequitable power relations. In order to undertake discourse analyses, human geographers often draw on one of three major schools of discourse analysis: Foucauldian discourse analysis (FDA), critical discourse analysis (CDA), or Gramscian techniques. There are several theoretical and methodological distinctions between these approaches. While different approaches have different strengths and weaknesses, they all provide researchers with an effective means of investigating and exposing semiotic features of power relations in specific sociospatial contexts. While there are no set procedures for these techniques, researchers have recognized certain essential investigative strategies that can be used to inform the performance of any type of discourse analysis project. These strategies are included below. A brief history of Critical Discourse Analysis is offered, along with a full examination of the numerous criticisms levied at CDA and its practitioners over the previous two decades, both by scholars working within the "critical" paradigm and by other critical critics. Reader response and integration of contextual aspects are discussed, as well as a range of objections directed at the underlying premises and analytical technique. Additionally, there is discussion of contentious issues, such as the negative focus of much CDA work and CDA's developing standing as a "intellectual orthodoxy" They highlight the major criticisms that have emerged from this overview and provide some ways to overcome these shortcomings.

Highlights

  • Critical Discourse Analysis is extensively regarded as a topic within the humanities and social sciences, and the abbreviation "critical discourse analysis (CDA)" is frequently used to refer to a recognized approach to language research employed by a variety of different organizations and disciplines

  • For the sake of this study, we will use the term critical discourse analysis (CDA) to refer to a huge body of theory and research created by specialists who identify as critical discourse analysts in some way

  • Blommaert (2017: 15) observes that critical discourse analysts frequently begin with preconceived notions about the primary actors in a given context, such as "politicians are manipulators" or "the media are ideology-producing machines." They frequently begin with stereotyped sociotheoretical constructs, such as business, institutions, and "traditional medicine." Among the contextual components he offers are three that he believes are overlooked by traditional CDA: resources, text trajectories, and data histories, all of which he believes are overlooked by conventional CDA

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Summary

Introduction

Critical Discourse Analysis is extensively regarded as a topic within the humanities and social sciences, and the abbreviation "CDA" is frequently used to refer to a recognized approach to language research employed by a variety of different organizations and disciplines. Others say critical discourse analysis is on the verge of becoming a "an intellectual orthodoxy" (Billig, 2002, p.44), an institutionalized discipline with its own paradigm, canon, and conventionalized assumptions, as well as a form of power structure. When it comes to thinking and exploring, CDA

Defining critical discourse analysis
Precursors of the intellectuality
Rebuttal to underlying principles
Textual description
The CDA and its context
CDA as a fundamentally negative compound
CDA as a form of intellectual dogma
Discussion
Conclusions
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