Legacies of totalitarian language in the discourse culture of the post-totalitarian era

Titel: Legacies of totalitarian language in the discourse culture of the post-totalitarian era : [the case of Eastern Europe, Russia, and China] / Ernest Andrews
Verfasser:
Veröffentlicht: Lanham, Md. ˜[u.a.]œ : Lexington Books, 2011
Umfang: VI, 216 S.
Format: Buch
Sprache: Englisch
RVK-Notation:
Schlagworte:
ISBN: 9780739164655 ; 0739164651
Lokale Klassifikation: 31 7 Q ; 31 7 Mk ; 31 10 B ; 31 15 L ; 22 15 L ; 32 15 L ; 46 15 L

This book is unique in its kind. It is the first scholarly work to attempt a comprehensive and fairly detailed look into the lingering legacies of the communist totalitarian modes of thought and expression in the new discourse forms of the post-totalitarian era. The book gives also new and interesting insights into the ways the new, presumably democratically-minded political elites in post-totalitarian Eastern Europe, Russia, and China manipulate language to serve their own political and economic agendas. The book consists of ten discrete discussions, nine case-studies or chapters and an introduction.

Chapter 1 discusses patterns of continuity and change in the conceptual apparatus and linguistic habits of political science and sociology practiced in the Czech Republic before and after 1989. Chapter 2 analyzes lingering effects of communist propaganda language in the political discourse and behavior in post-communist Poland. Chapter 3 analyzes the legacy of Soviet semantics in post-Soviet Moldovan politics through the prism of such politically contested words as "democracy," "democratization," and "people." Chapters 4 and 5 discuss the way in which communist patterns of thought and expression manifest themselves in the new political discourse in Romania and Bulgaria, respectively. Chapter 6 examines phenomena of change and continuity in the socio-linguistic and socio-political scene of post-Soviet Latvia. Chapter 7 analyzes the extent to which the language of the post-communist Romanian media differs from the official language of the communist era. Chapter 8 examines the evolution of Russian official discourse since the late eighties with a view of showing "whether or not new phenomena in the evolution of post-Soviet discourse represent new development or just a mutation of the value-orientations of the old Soviet ideological apparatus." Chapter 9 gives a detailed and lucid account of the evolution of both official and non-official discourse in China since the end of the Mao era.