Writing the War on Terrorism: Language, Politics and Counter-terrorism'Writing the war on terrorism' examines the public language of the war on terrorism, and the way that rhetoric has been used to justify the global counter-terrorism offensive as a response to 9/11. It discusses how language has been used to deliberately manipulate public anxiety about terrorist threats to gain support for military action, and how the abuse of Iraqi prisoners has been normalised through rhetoric and practice. . The author argues that the normalisation and institutionalisation of the administration's current counter-terrorism approach is damaging to society's ethical values and to democratic political participation. |
Contents
language and politics | 1 |
Analysing the language of counterterrorism | 8 |
Writing September 11 2001 | 29 |
Writing identity evil terrorists good Americans | 59 |
Writing threat and danger | 92 |
Writing the good new war on terrorism | 121 |
Language and power reproducing the discourse | 153 |
politics violence and resistance | 180 |
official texts | 190 |
216 | |
Index | 225 |
Other editions - View all
Writing the war on terrorism: Language, politics and counter-terrorism Richard Jackson Limited preview - 2018 |
Writing the War on Terrorism: Language, Politics and Counter-terrorism Richard Jackson No preview available - 2005 |
Common terms and phrases
20 September abuse actions actually Afghanistan Afghanistan and Iraq al Qaeda aliens American exceptionalism Applause Ashcroft barbarism bombing campaign casualties Cheney citizens civilians civilisation coalition cold cold war conflict counter-terrorism counter-terrorist create critical discourse analysis cultural defend deliberately demonise discursive construction discursive strategies Donald Rumsfeld enemy evil example fear fight forces foreign policy freedom global globalisation identity innocent Iraqi John Ashcroft justice killed kind language of counter-terrorism law enforcement lives mass destruction meaning meta-narrative Middle East military moral murder myths narrative October official discourse Osama bin Laden peace Pearl Harbor Pentagon political discourse political violence powerful prisoners Qaeda reasons regimes reinforces response rhetorical Saddam sense September 11 simply social society speech symbolic Taliban television terrorism terrorist attacks terrorist suspects threat and danger United USA Patriot Act victims war on terrorism weapons of mass Wolfowitz words World War II