A text linguistic analysis of political speeches: A case study of Obama speeches
Abstract
This study attempted an analysis of political rally speeches. It specifically focused on the
standards of cohesion, coherence, acceptability and situationality of speeches delivered
by the current US President, Barrack Hussein Obama, Jr, during the 2008 run up US
presidential election campaigns. The study basically employs textlinguistic framework
and other communication theories especially the theories of persuasion set with a mission
to unravel the spell binding elements in the speeches which saw Obama triumph
overwhelmingly over his rival, the Senator John McCain, in the presidential race.
This thesis is organized into five chapters. The first chapter is an introductory chapter. It
treats introductory elements of this study i.e. introduction, statement of the problem,
aims, rationale of the study, hypothesis, scope, literature review and finally methodology.
The second chapter gives the theoretical foundation of the work. In an analysis of
speech, many contentious terms whose definitions have varied use and application come
into play. These terms are often viewed differently by different scholars creating
diversity in unity. For ease of the task ahead, we have looked at terms like text,
discourse, dialogue and monologue, cohesion, coherence, speech and rhetoric with a view
to formulating a working definition of each concept as viewed in this work.
The third chapter deals with cohesion and coherence in Obama speeches. This is an
attempt to understand how Obama speeches hang together and how individual linguistic
units: words, phrases, clauses and sentences relate with one another to come up with
whole bundle. The bundle may be called a topic. Coherence principle investigates how
the sub-topics form the larger topic Obama uses to persuade the American electorate into
voting him. Utterances in a political speech, as has been shown, are a strung to a
fragment in a way that is highly principled and fairly predictable. Obama's political
speeches show a high degree of topic coherence and signaling as he moves from one
paratone to another. The topic is, therefore, interpreted as a complex entity having a
number of topic related elements contributing to it.
The fourth chapter treats elements of Beaugrande's Acceptability and Situationality in
Obama speeches. A speech is only acceptable to the audience if it meets the receiver's
attitude in a communication context. Situationality, on the complementary explores what
the speaker said, when does he say it, why does he say it, where does he say it, and how
does he say it. The chapter examines why Obama says what, where, and how. In order
to win the audience, Obama must persuasively and in a particular manner talk on a
particular topic at a particular place.
The last chapter is a conclusion. It offers a summary of the thesis and suggestion for
further research. The study was library based although the appended speeches were
downloaded on-line. The audio visual cassettes were also used for verification purposes.
The written texts were analyzed focusing on specific areas of interest.
Citation
Gumbo, G. O(2009). A text linguistic analysis of political speeches: a case study of Obama speechesSponsorhip
University of NairobiPublisher
Department of Linguistic and Languages, University of Nairobi
Description
Msc- Thesis