Terrorism in Popular Culture: A Discourse Analysis of the Portrayal of IRA-Terrorism in Films
diploma thesis (DEFENDED)
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/69103Identifiers
Study Information System: 150995
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- Kvalifikační práce [17123]
Author
Advisor
Consultant
Střítecký, Vít
Referee
Ditrych, Ondřej
Faculty / Institute
Faculty of Social Sciences
Discipline
International Security Studies
Department
Department of International Relations
Date of defense
25. 6. 2014
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta sociálních vědLanguage
English
Grade
Excellent
Keywords (Czech)
terrorism, discourse analysis, IRA, filmKeywords (English)
terrorism, discourse analysis, IRA, filmKan Prateepjinda Terrorism in Popular Culture: A Discourse Analysis of the Portrayal of IRA Terrorism in Films Abstract The paper begins by asserting that -terrorism‖ is a social construct based on discourse from a particular historical context, and that our understanding of terrorism is fashioned by that discourse. It goes on to argue that film, as a powerful medium of popular culture, generates meaning of social events and gives filmgoers a feeling of reality; film functions as a second view on the world, guiding audiences from reel to real. The study shows how the forty-year long (1968-2008) history of IRA terrorism is portrayed through a selection of eight films, and the -articulation‖ and -interpellation‖ are studied empirically through the portrayal of terrorism in these films. The discourse on terrorism is analyzed in terms of discourse productivity, and the study uses Foucault's genealogy to trace the -history of present-day IRA terrorism.‖ The findings show that discursive formations are displayed as four different features of IRA terrorism constructed by film language and textual language. These different features reveal the discontinuity of the discourse that is framed by particular time periods. The paper concludes that IRA terrorism (and the acts of IRA terrorists), as portrayed in the eight...