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The Systematic Adaptation of Violence Contexts in the ISIS Discourse: A Contrastive Corpus-Based Study

Abdelzaher, E.: The Systematic Adaptation of Violence Contexts in the ISIS Discourse: A Contrastive Corpus-Based Study.
Corpus Pragmatics. 3 (2), 173-203, 2019.
title:
The Systematic Adaptation of Violence Contexts in the ISIS Discourse: A Contrastive Corpus-Based Study
authors:
  • Abdelzaher, Esra
published:
2019
type:
article
genre:
research article/review article
journal:
Corpus Pragmatics (ISSN: 2509-9507, 2509-9515)
language:
English
HAC:
Humanities, Linguistics
subjects:
Context, Contrastive analysis, FrameNet, ISIS, Theological conflict
abstract:
Categorizing an act as 'violence', ♭resistance', ♭defense' or ♭punishment' depends on the context within which the act occurs. Concerned with the context of violence, this study adopts a pragmatic approach to focus on the techniques ISIS uses to project participants involved in the context of violence, in corpora representing the Arabic and English ISIS discourses in 2014 and 2015. FrameNet is employed to identify the typical participants in the violence contexts/frames. Results show that the projection of participants in violent events systematically varies according to the addressed society ISIS targets. ISIS depends on priming historical conflicts to urge hostile encounter against socio-linguistically and historically diverse enemies. Addressing the Arab world in which the Shia/Sunni conflict is central, ISIS wages the war mainly against Safawi armies. However, the ISIS English discourse basically activates the Crusader/Muslim war. Overall, four expandable designations are constantly used to label any ISIS enemy: ♭crusader' for Christian enemies; ♭Murtadd' for Sunni Muslim opponents; ♭Safawi' for Shia adversaries and ♭Kuffar/disbelievers' for religiously undefined groups.
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