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News discourse

Mass media communication from the seventeenth to the twenty-first century

Abstract

Against the methodological background of historical discourse analysis, this paper traces some of the relevant factors that influenced the development of news discourse from the seventeenth to the twenty first century. In the seventeenth century the occasional news publications that were published in response to important events were replaced by more regular news publications. The structure of articles was generally narrative and chronological. The familiar inverted pyramid structure emerged from the beginning of the twentieth century. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, mass media news discourse consists of an ever-increasing flood of information that is broken down into increasingly smaller snippets of information in the form of hypertextual and multi-modal information units.

Abstract

Against the methodological background of historical discourse analysis, this paper traces some of the relevant factors that influenced the development of news discourse from the seventeenth to the twenty first century. In the seventeenth century the occasional news publications that were published in response to important events were replaced by more regular news publications. The structure of articles was generally narrative and chronological. The familiar inverted pyramid structure emerged from the beginning of the twentieth century. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, mass media news discourse consists of an ever-increasing flood of information that is broken down into increasingly smaller snippets of information in the form of hypertextual and multi-modal information units.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Acknowledgments ix
  4. A frame for windows 1
  5. Part I. Discourse in the public sphere
  6. News discourse 7
  7. Advertising discourse in eighteenth-century English newspapers 23
  8. Presidential inaugural addresses 39
  9. Freedom of speech at stake 53
  10. Text-initiating strategies in eighteenth-century newspaper headlines 65
  11. Part II. Science and academia
  12. Patterns of agentivity and narrativity in early science discourse 83
  13. The economics academic lecture in the nineteenth century 95
  14. Contesting authorities 109
  15. Personal pronouns in argumentation 123
  16. Criticism under scrutiny 143
  17. The underlying pattern of the Renaissance botanical genre pinax 161
  18. Genres and the appropriation of science 179
  19. Part III. Letters and litterature
  20. Chaucer's narrators and audiences 199
  21. Discourse on a par with syntax, or the effects of the linguistic organisation of letters on the diachronic characterisation of the text type 215
  22. Verba sic spernit mea 237
  23. Part IV. Discourse and pragmatics
  24. ‘Ther been thinges thre, the whiche thynges troublen al this erthe’ 259
  25. Processes underlying the development of pragmatic markers 279
  26. From certainty to doubt 301
  27. Politeness as a distancing device in the passive and in indefinite pronouns 319
  28. Part V. Language contact and discourse
  29. Discourse features of code-switching in legal reports in late medieval England 343
  30. Focusing strategies in Old French and Old Irish 353
  31. Medieval mixed-language business discourse and the rise of Standard English 381
  32. Author Index 401
  33. Subject Index 409
Heruntergeladen am 14.4.2026 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1075/pbns.134.04juc/html
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