This chapter focuses on the functions and properties of the American late-night TV talk show as used during the 2008 presidential campaign. It analyses some interviews with presidential candidates (Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and John McCain) broadcast on CBS’s Late Show with David Letterman, CNN’s Larry King Live and NBC’s Tonight Show with Jay Leno in order to demonstrate the ways the talk show’s generic conventions tend to be recruited to suit politicians’ aims. This case study illustrates how the semi-institutional nature of the talk show allows candidates to implement such campaigning strategies as the performance of sociability, the management of impressions, the manufacture of authenticity, and the tactical maneuvering between institutional and personal discourse. The study identifies and critiques some discursive practices enabled by the talk show’s generic formula which can be used manipulatively by campaigners.
2023. Approaches to the Analysis of Metadiscourse Features in Political Discourse. Complutense Journal of English Studies 31 ► pp. e81534 ff.
Bouvier, Gwen & Lyndon C. S. Way
2021. Revealing the politics in “soft”, everyday uses of social media: the challenge for critical discourse studies. Social Semiotics 31:3 ► pp. 345 ff.
2020. “That’s Not Funny!” Identity and the organization of interaction on USA entertainment-political interviews. Discourse, Context & Media 35 ► pp. 100386 ff.
2017. Politicians on celebrity talk shows. Discourse, Context & Media 20 ► pp. 146 ff.
van Leeuwen, Theo
2015. Critical Discourse Analysis. In The International Encyclopedia of Language and Social Interaction, ► pp. 1 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 6 september 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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