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This article aims to show how the position of the enunciator gives to the discourse on health a special value and influences its reception by the recipients. Using different discursive methods, the enunciator always seeks to legitimize and credibilize his mediated communication. For this, he emphasizes his authority, emphasizing his professional skills or his institutional affiliation on the one hand, and creating a serene and convivial relationship between him and his readers by saying the truth and saying it right, on the other hand.

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dc.contributor.author MAKHLOUF, Abdelkader
dc.contributor.author DRISS, Mohamed Amine
dc.date.accessioned 2024-11-13T13:41:45Z
dc.date.available 2024-11-13T13:41:45Z
dc.date.issued 2017-06-10
dc.identifier.issn 2507-721X
dc.identifier.issn EISSN-2507-721X
dc.identifier.uri http://ddeposit.univ-alger2.dz:8080/xmlui/handle/20.500.12387/7589
dc.description.abstract The present study investigates the representation of Islam in President Obama’s Cairo speech. Many researchers consider Obama’s speeches to be characterised with a powerful language associated often with rhetoric, a firm and measured delivery that exudes confidence and produces a sense of purpose. Moreover, Obama’s speeches have been described to be embedded with certain forms of pragmatism. Hence, the present research incites us to discover the way Islam is represented in Obama’s Cairo speech, mainly from the point of pragmatism and rhetoric, contemporaneously with a time empowered by conflict between the United States and Muslims around the world, and what interest and relationship can be found between the West and Islam. The complex relationship between the United States and various Muslim countries led many people from both sides to view each other as adversely hostile to their principles and traditions. To this effect, the researchers try to analyse how far Obama’s Cairo speech represents Islam with regard to his rhetorical language form associated with pragmatism, with the assumption that what something ‘is’ becomes shaped and represented by the use of language within specific language-games. ar_AR
dc.language.iso en ar_AR
dc.publisher المجلة الجزائرية لعلوم اللسان -مخبر اللسانيات وعلم الاجتماع اللغوي وتعليمية اللغات-كلية الغة العربية وآدابها واللغات الشرقية جامعة الجزائر -2- ar_AR
dc.relation.ispartofseries المجلد 02;العدد 01
dc.rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States *
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/ *
dc.subject discours ar_AR
dc.subject Islam ar_AR
dc.subject représentation ar_AR
dc.subject pragmatisme ar_AR
dc.subject rhétorique ar_AR
dc.subject discourse ar_AR
dc.subject Islam ar_AR
dc.subject representationpragmatism ar_AR
dc.subject rhetoric ar_AR
dc.title This article aims to show how the position of the enunciator gives to the discourse on health a special value and influences its reception by the recipients. Using different discursive methods, the enunciator always seeks to legitimize and credibilize his mediated communication. For this, he emphasizes his authority, emphasizing his professional skills or his institutional affiliation on the one hand, and creating a serene and convivial relationship between him and his readers by saying the truth and saying it right, on the other hand. ar_AR
dc.type Article ar_AR
dc.Access


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