Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. — 321 p.
This volume was inspired by a stimulating conference in Vienna in July 2000. Most of the contributors discuss the problems and issues of Critical Discourse Analysis and Interdisciplinarity here. The questions which are raised in the book lead us from abstract reflections on theory building to aspects of application of empirical results and to political practice.
Introduction: Theory, Interdisciplinarity and Critical Discourse Analysis
Gilbert Weiss and Ruth WodakCritical ≠ Critical ≠ CriticalCritical Discourse Analysis and the Rhetoric of Critique
Michael BilligCritical Discourse Analysis and the Development of the New Science
Carlos A.M. GouveiaReflexivity and the Doubles of Modern Man: The Discursive Construction of Anthropological Subject Positions
Marianne W. JørgensenDebating and Practising InterdisciplinarityThe Discourse-Knowledge Interface
Teun A. van DijkCritical Discourse Analysis and Evaluative Meaning: Interdisciplinarity as a Critical Turn
Phil GrahamTexts and Discourses in the Technologies of Social Organization
Jay L. LemkeIdentities in Flux: Arabs and Jews in Israel
Marcelo DascalPolitical and Somatic Alignment: Habitus, Ideology and Social Practice
Suzanne ScollonVoicing the ‘Other’: Reading and Writing Indigenous Australians
Jim R. MartinFrom Theory to Social and Political PracticeActivist Sociolinguistics in a Critical Discourse Analysis Perspective
Patricia E. O’ConnorDiscourse at Work: When Women Take On the Role of Manager
Luisa Martín Rojo and Concepción Gómez EstebanCross-Cultural Representation of ‘Otherness’ in Media Discourse
Carmen Rosa Caldas-CoulthardInteraction between Visual and Verbal Communication: Changing Patterns in the Printed Media
Christine Anthonissen