Playing upon news genre conventions
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Isabel Ermida
Abstract
Mark Twain’s famous hoax articles, such as “Petrified Man” (1862) and “A Bloody Massacre near Carson” (1863), are forerunners of a genre – news satire – which blends together social criticism, humour and intentional deception. Unlike the present-day fake news press, represented e.g. by the British satirical magazine Private Eye or the American spoof newspaper The Onion, most of these inaugural forms were not based on actual events. Instead, they created entirely imaginary situations so as to feed the readers’ thirst for shocking sensations while satirising their manias. Interestingly, Twain’s made-up stories propagated massively due to the readers’ credulity. This paper aims at examining this particular facet of the great American writer’s production, in particular the linguistic and discursive strategies he uses in mixing fact and fiction, in playing with frames of reference and in exploiting the readers’ interpretive expectations. For this purpose, a Model of News Satire is applied to a corpus of spoof news articles by Twain in order to test the occurrence of three components – the intertextual, the critical, and the comic. In particular, the model offers an analysis of the structure and style of the texts, of the butts they target, and of the script oppositions they trigger, the overall combination of which amounts to a specific textual genre: that of news satire.
Abstract
Mark Twain’s famous hoax articles, such as “Petrified Man” (1862) and “A Bloody Massacre near Carson” (1863), are forerunners of a genre – news satire – which blends together social criticism, humour and intentional deception. Unlike the present-day fake news press, represented e.g. by the British satirical magazine Private Eye or the American spoof newspaper The Onion, most of these inaugural forms were not based on actual events. Instead, they created entirely imaginary situations so as to feed the readers’ thirst for shocking sensations while satirising their manias. Interestingly, Twain’s made-up stories propagated massively due to the readers’ credulity. This paper aims at examining this particular facet of the great American writer’s production, in particular the linguistic and discursive strategies he uses in mixing fact and fiction, in playing with frames of reference and in exploiting the readers’ interpretive expectations. For this purpose, a Model of News Satire is applied to a corpus of spoof news articles by Twain in order to test the occurrence of three components – the intertextual, the critical, and the comic. In particular, the model offers an analysis of the structure and style of the texts, of the butts they target, and of the script oppositions they trigger, the overall combination of which amounts to a specific textual genre: that of news satire.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Preface vii
- Introduction ix
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The formation of public news discourse and metadiscursive terminology
- “We have in some former bookes told you” 3
- Conceptualisations, sources and agents of news 23
-
Changing modes of reference and shifts in audience orientation
- News in space and time 55
- Changing genre conventions and socio-cultural change 81
- Late Modern English death notices 103
- Medical news in England 1665–1800 in journals for professional and lay audiences 135
-
Transgressing boundaries and shifting styles
- Comparing discourse construction in 17th-century news genres 163
- Speech-like syntax in written texts 191
- Playing upon news genre conventions 223
- Index 251
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Preface vii
- Introduction ix
-
The formation of public news discourse and metadiscursive terminology
- “We have in some former bookes told you” 3
- Conceptualisations, sources and agents of news 23
-
Changing modes of reference and shifts in audience orientation
- News in space and time 55
- Changing genre conventions and socio-cultural change 81
- Late Modern English death notices 103
- Medical news in England 1665–1800 in journals for professional and lay audiences 135
-
Transgressing boundaries and shifting styles
- Comparing discourse construction in 17th-century news genres 163
- Speech-like syntax in written texts 191
- Playing upon news genre conventions 223
- Index 251