From the American Civil Rights Movement to the Arab Spring, protest movements have been at the heart of pivotal points in our history. Analysis of the language of these movements on television, print news sources and the more recent social media platforms like Twitter, provides a fascinating insight into the dynamic linguistic phenomenon that has often impacted society in dramatic ways through the promotion of change.
Looking at multiple genres of literature and taking a cross-cultural perspective, The Language of Protest provides:
Understanding of what is 'protest language' and how it is created
Analysis of the common patterns in the production and use of protest language over time such as use of the concept of "us versus them"
Examination of how these common patterns is being reconfigured into contemporary renderings via the new social media
Exploration of the relationships between dominant language and protest language
Examples of protest language from movements that include the American Civil Rights Movement; the Arab Spring; the Guatemalan Electricity protests; and the Occupy Movement
Links to further readings and video clips of protest movements from around the world.
The Language of Protest will be of interest to those who are studying and analysing protest language, speech act theory, and language and politics.