Trump and Muslims: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Islamophobic Rhetoric in Donald Trump's Selected Tweets

被引:9
|
作者
Khan, Mohsin Hassan [1 ,2 ]
Qazalbash, Farwa [3 ]
Adnan, Hamedi Mohd [2 ]
Yaqin, Lalu Nurul [4 ]
Khuhro, Rashid Ali [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Management & Technol, Sch Media & Commun Studies, C-2 Johar Town, Lahore 54782, Pakistan
[2] Univ Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
[3] Kinnaird Coll Women, Lahore, Pakistan
[4] Univ Gunung Rinjani, Selong, Indonesia
[5] Univ Sindh, Jamshoro, Pakistan
来源
SAGE OPEN | 2021年 / 11卷 / 01期
关键词
Donald Trump; US 2016 presidential elections; Twitter; Islamophobia; critical discourse studies; us versus them; QUALITATIVE RESEARCH; REPRESENTATION; ELECTION; TWITTER; MEDIA; ISLAM; CAMPAIGN; ONLINE; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1177/21582440211004172
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
The emergence of Donald Trump as an anti-Muslim-Islam presidential candidate and victory over Hillary Clinton is an issue of debate and division in the United States' political sphere. Many commentators and political pundits criticize Trump for his disparaging rhetoric on Twitter and present him as an example of how Twitter can be an effective tool for the construction and extension of political polarization. The current study analyzes the selected tweets by Donald Trump posted on Twitter to unmask how he uses language to construct Islamophobic discourse structures and attempts to form his ideological structures along with. The researchers hypothesize that Islamophobia is a marked feature of Trump's political career realized by specific rhetorical and discursive devices. Therefore, the study purposively takes 40 most controversial tweets of Donald Trump against Islam and Muslims and carried out a critical discourse analysis with the help of macro-strategies of the discourse given by Wodak and Meyer and van Dijk's referential strategies of political discourse. The findings reveal that Trump uses language rhetorically to exclude people of different ethnic identities, especially Muslims, through demagogic language to create a difference of "us" vs. "them" and making in this way "America Great Again".
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] An Ideological Analysis of the Former President Donald Trump’s Tweets During COVID-19
    Xue Luo
    Mei He
    Zhonggen Yu
    Corpus Pragmatics, 2022, 6 : 23 - 38
  • [22] Donald Trump in Power: Discourse, Performativity, Identification
    Venizelos, Giorgos
    CRITICAL SOCIOLOGY, 2023, 49 (4-5) : 647 - 667
  • [23] An Ideological Analysis of the Former President Donald Trump's Tweets During COVID-19
    Luo, Xue
    He, Mei
    Yu, Zhonggen
    CORPUS PRAGMATICS, 2022, 6 (01) : 23 - 38
  • [24] Donald Trump's America
    Andreani, Gilles
    SURVIVAL, 2016, 58 (02) : 193 - 195
  • [25] Donald Trump's tweets, political value judgment, and the Renminbi exchange rate
    Zhang, Qisi
    Frommel, Michael
    Baidoo, Edwin
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, 2024, 93
  • [26] Discursive (De)legitimization of the Iran Nuclear Deal in Donald Trump's Tweets
    Nourani, Hossein
    Danesh, Afsaneh
    Nouri, Mohammad Reza
    Latifi, Farzaneh
    STRATEGIC ANALYSIS, 2020, 44 (04) : 332 - 345
  • [27] In search of enemies: Donald Trump's populist foreign policy rhetoric
    Hall, Jonny
    POLITICS, 2021, 41 (01) : 48 - 63
  • [28] Tweetranslating Trump: Outranspo's "bad translations" of Trump's tweets
    Bloomfield, Camille
    Robert-Foley, Lily
    CONTEMPORARY FRENCH AND FRANCOPHONE STUDIES, 2017, 21 (05) : 469 - 476
  • [29] Donald Trump's America
    Chavez, Linda
    COMMENTARY, 2015, 140 (03) : 13 - 19
  • [30] 'I'm not a virus': Asian hate in Donald Trump's rhetoric
    Zheng, Jennifer
    Zompetti, Joseph P.
    ASIAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2023, 33 (05) : 470 - 503