In the third episode, my guest, Alicia, will talk about her experience at Södertörn University. In addition, we will go over her graduation thesis, which is about critical discourse analysis of Alexander Bard, cancel culture, and freedom of speech.
Host: Nour
Guest: Alicia Sörensen
Design & Edit: Nour. Music: AstralVibe
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References:
1) Alexander Bard Tweets: a) Bardissimo (2020). If black lives want to matter, then black lives get their fucking shit together, study hard, go to work, make their own money instead of depend on welfare, stop lying, get out of prison, and become heroes instead of self-appointed victims for the world to laugh at. That matters! [Twitter], 13 June. https://twitter.com/bardissimo/status/1271715838505205762 [2021-04-22].
b) Bardissimo (2017). Well, I'm a Marxist libertarian. So if I chat with Marxists, I get blocked by libertarians, and if I hang out with libertarians, I get blocked by Marxists. So I personify the Antiblocking Movement on Twitter. Now there's the next political victim identity! [Twitter] 24 December. https://archive.ph/20200614204501/https://twitter.com/bardissimo/status/944831547126853637#selection-429.0-429.257 [2021-04-22].
2) Why voice matter: Couldry, N. (2010). Why voice matters: culture and politics after neoliberalism. London: Sage.
3) Cancel culture: D.Clark, M. (2020). DRAG THEM: A brief etymology of so-called “cancel culture”. Communication and the Public, 5(3-4) 88–92 DOI: 10.1177/2057047320961562.
4) Discourse analysis, the role of the media, and the discursive practice of a society: Fairclough, N. (1995) Media Discourse, London & New York: Arnold.
5) Critical discourse analysis: Van Dijk, T. (2008). “Critical discourse analysis”. Deborah Schiffrin, Deborah Tannen & Heidi E. Hamilton, red., The Handbook of Discourse Analysis.
6) Critical discourse analysis as a Method of research: Ahrne, G., & Svensson. (2015). Handbok i kvalitativa metoder. Stockholm: Liber. Hammersley.