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Political Rhetoric (samenvatting)

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Full summary of Political Rhetoric (Pieter Maeseele), based on all the lecturer's PowerPoints. The subject matter is clearly bundled and supplemented with additional examples to better understand the concepts. 57 pages.

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Political Rhetoric
Pieter Maeseele

good to know
-​ At the end of the course, you should have mastered the following…
-​ Explain the interaction between language, media, and society using the concept of
discourse.
-​ Analyze how media language contributes to power relations and identity formation.
-​ Critically reflect on representations in various types of media.
-​ Conduct a basic discourse analysis of media material.
-​ Course contents
-​ Social constructionism
-​ What is meaning and where does it reside?
-​ Poststructuralism
-​ How does discourse shape the possible?
-​ Critical discourse analysis
-​ How is power enacted through discourse?
-​ Cultural media studies
-​ How do media sustain or challenge discourse?
-​ Qualitative paradigm
-​ Lectures: theoretical frameworks and concepts.
-​ Philosophical questions: can we find meaning in our minds?
-​ Pragmatic approach: no history of definitions or lineage of authors
-​ Seminar: application to current media texts, in small groups.
-​ Self-study: preparation for analysis and exam.
-​ Written exam: assessment of understanding and reflection.
-​ There will be no class recordings.
-​ STUDIEMATERIAAL
-​ Lecture notes
-​ Slides (BB)
-​ Selected articles and chapters (BB)

-​ Exam: Written examination without oral presentation

-​ Seminar: group assignment
-​ During the penultimate class, students complete a group assignment consisting of a
discourse analysis of media material. In the final class, feedback is given on this
assignment. If you are absent, you will not receive points for this assignment. In case of a
justified absence, an alternative assignment will be provided.




1

,LES 2 - 22/10 (week 5)
Social constructionism




From essentialism to constructionism
Essentialism
-> Meaning reflects reality (language represents).
Structuralism
-> Meaning comes from linguistic systems (Saussure).
Constructionism
-> Meaning is produced through discourse; reality is made, not merely reflected.
-> Emerges in 1960s sociology, influenced by:
-> Phenomenology (Husserl, Schutz): experience as intersubjective.
-> Symbolic interactionism (Mead, Blumer): self and society built through interaction.
-> Linguistic turn in philosophy: language as constitutive of reality.


2

,Core Assumptions of Social Constructionism









​ ​ ​

Examples of Social Constructions
➔​ Money: paper or digits become “valuable” through shared belief.
➔​ Gender: norms of masculinity/femininity are learned, not biological.
➔​ Race: socially defined categories with real social effects.
➔​ Mental illness: definitions change across time and culture.
=> Are social constructions “unreal,” or do they have real consequences?




3

, Where can meaning be found?
Traditionally, linguists and philosophers have tried to “locate” meaning in one of two places:
1.​ In the mind — as mental concepts or ideas that words refer to (a kind of mental
dictionary).
2.​ In the brain — as neural activity or patterns that correspond to meanings (a cognitive or
neuroscientific approach).

Both views assume that meaning exists inside individuals — either as inner representations or
brain states.

Why not in mental concepts?
➔​ We can never directly access another person’s thoughts; we can only interpret what they
say or write.
➔​ If meaning were purely mental, communication would be impossible — we’d each be
locked inside our own minds.
➔​ The only thing we can access and share are discourses — the socially circulating uses of
language that give words their sense.

So, meaning must be collective, not private.
=> We don’t share meanings by sharing “mental representations”; we share meanings by
participating in public language practices.

Why not in neural activity?
➔​ Neural activity can explain how we process language, but not what it means.
➔​ Brains don’t “contain” meaning; they enable participation in discourse.
➔​ The relation between words and concepts is cultural and historical, not biological.

In other words, neural states are necessary but not sufficient for meaning.
=> Meaning belongs to the social level — the level of discourse — not to the biological
substrate.

A social and discursive phenomenon:
➔​ Emerges in discourse, understood as all the texts and talks produced by a speech
community over time.
➔​ Is intersubjective — shared, negotiated, and contested between people.
➔​ Is historical and contextual — it changes as discursive practices change.

So the “meaning” of a word like freedom, democracy, or love is not in anyone’s head, but in
how it has been used and argued over in public language.
=> Meaning is what a community has made of a word — through its ongoing use in
discourse.

By symbolic interaction in social communication
★​ All meaning is symbolic: “Unless I am told, a word means nothing.”
★​ Meaning is only in discourse.
★​ We have no access to the individual mind or to reality “out there”.
★​ The text alone has no meaning in itself.
★​ Reality is constructed in discourse.
4

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