对话
反问句
政治
意义(存在)
社会学
认识论
帧(网络)
美学
语言学
文学类
艺术
哲学
计算机科学
沟通
政治学
法学
电信
作者
Paula Fonseca,Esther Pascual,Todd Oakley
出处
期刊:Review of Cognitive Linguistics. Published under the auspices of the Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association
[John Benjamins Publishing Company]
日期:2020-04-06
卷期号:18 (1): 180-212
被引量:23
标识
DOI:10.1075/rcl.00056.fon
摘要
Abstract What makes The Daily Show with Jon Stewart so successful as social and political satire? Rhetorical theorists and critics have identified several mechanisms for satisfying the show’s satiric and parodic aim, which include parodic polyglossia , contextual clash , and satirical specificity ( Waisanen, 2009 ). We present a unified account of meaning construction that encompasses these three mechanisms within the framework of blended fictive interaction ( Pascual, 2002 , 2008a b ). Satire results from emergent effects of different conceptual configurations that have to be in place to integrate a pastiche of speech whose provenance originates in different and diverse contexts and genres. The integration of contradictory, conceptually disjointed pieces of discourse under the governing structure of the conversation frame accounts for the show’s most conspicuous satirical moments. These imagined interactions highlight facets of the real world for critical commentary. The thick description of an influential Daily Show segment deepens our understanding of contemporary political satire.
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