>
Meaning in the Media: Discourse, Controversy and Debate

Meaning in the Media: Discourse, Controversy and Debate

  • £39.69
  • Save £24


Alan Durant
Cambridge University Press, 3/4/2010
EAN 9780521199582, ISBN10: 0521199581

Hardcover, 268 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English

Meaning in the Media addresses the issue of how we should respond to competing claims about meaning put forward in confrontations between people or organisations in highly charged circumstances such as bitter public controversies and expensive legal disputes. Alan Durant draws attention to the pervasiveness and significance of such meaning-related disputes in the media, investigating how their 'meaning' dimension is best described and explained. Through his analysis of deception, distortion, bias, false advertising, offensiveness and other kinds of communicative behaviour that trigger interpretive disputes, Durant shows that we can understand both meaning and media better if we focus in new ways on moments in discourse when the apparently continuous flow of understanding and agreement breaks down. This lively and contemporary volume will be invaluable to students and teachers of linguistics, media studies, journalism and law.

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I. Communication Failure and Interpretive Conflict
1. From personal disagreement to meaning troublespot
2. Signs of trouble
3. Different kinds of meaning question
Part II. Making Sense of 'Meaning'
4. Meaning and the appeal to semantics
5. Interpretive variation
6. Time-based meaning
Part III. Verbal Disputes and Approaches to Resolving Them
7. Meaning as a knockout competition
8. Standards of interpretation
Part IV. Analysing Disputes in Different Fields of Law and Regulation
9. Defamation
'reasonably capable of bearing the meaning attributed'
10. Advertising
'not only what is said, but what is reasonably implied'
11. Offensiveness
'if there is a meaning, it is doubtless objectionable'
Part V. Conclusion
12. Trust in interpretation
References.

'Brilliant, highly readable, sophisticated, and illustrated with a wealth of well-chosen examples, Meaning in the Media offers a major new analysis of disputes about meaning in public life, and of the linguistic, legal and social factors that affect their resolution. Essential reading not only for linguists, media scholars and specialists in language and the law, but for anyone who has ever been involved in a debate about defamation, honesty in advertising, or offensive language.' Deirdre Wilson, Emeritus Professor of Linguistics, University College London and co-author with Dan Sperber of Relevance: Communication and Cognition