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UNIT 2 INSTITUTIONALSOCIAL COMMUNICATION

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Title: UNIT 2 INSTITUTIONALSOCIAL COMMUNICATION


1
UNIT 2 INSTITUTIONAL/SOCIAL COMMUNICATION
  • PROMOTERS
  • the state, local authorities, politicians,
    public institutions ( e.g. universities, public
    libraries, post offices), charities (operational
    or campaigning), Nonprofit Organisations,
    Non-Governmental Organisations NGO (e.g. Amnesty
    International, Medicins sans frontières)
  • lo stato enti locali esponenti politici
    istituzioni pubbliche e private volontariato
    organizzazioni senza scopo di lucro,
    Organizzazioni non-governative ONG
  • RECEIVERS
  • citizens, supporters, members, consumers,
    visitors
  • cittadini, sostenitori, membri, consumatori,
    visitatori

2
UNIT 2 INSTITUTIONAL / SOCIAL COMMUNICATION
  • FIELDS COVERED citizens rights and duties (e.g.
    pensions, taxes), the great tragedies of humanity
    (e.g. poverty, child mortality) health (e.g.
    organ donation, AIDS), environment preservation
    (e.g. recycling), education, political and
    cultural life, recreational activities ( e.g
    sport)
  • AIMS fund raising, publicizing services and
    facilities, informing and creating awareness,
    warning

3
INSTITUTIONAL/SOCIAL COMMUNICATION
  • GENRES and CONTEXTS documents and leaflets in
    public offices, web sites, hoardings (Br.E) and
    billboards (Am.E.) in the streets, ads in the
    Press and on TV, speeches,
  • LINGUISTIC AND DISCOURSAL FEATURES from clear
    and precise official legal documents to
    communicative strategies used in advertising or
    political communication

4
A one-page example of social communication (or
humanitarian advertising) from The Financial
Times,8th March 2007
  • Where does
  • a litre
  • of water
  • cost
  • more than
  • in Central
  • London?
  • In a developing
  • country slum
  • WATER The water crisis hits the poor the hardest
    - by far. In some poor
  • countries water costs 5 to 10
    times more than in richest ones
  • ALERT The poorer you are, the more you pay.
  • To put water on everyones
    lips. Click on www.UNDP.ORG

5
TEXT 8 Barack Obama Speech Address to Joint
Session of Congress, Delivered on February 24,
2009
  • Speech, written-to-be spoken
  • Argumentative structure
  • Paragraphs 1,2,3,4 Introducing the topic. Value
    of a good education. Need to go beyond a high
    school diploma and reduce the high dropout rates.
  • Paragraphs 5 Some resources have already been
    provided
  • Paragraphs 6-7 Need for reform. Americans
    should study - or train for a career- longer
  • Paragraphs 8-9 People who will accept to give
    back to their community will be helped to pay
    tuition. Successful reform needs parents
    commitment

6
TEXT 8 Rhetorical/Textual choices
  • Use of personal pronouns and possessive
    adjectives we/us, our, you/your/I/ me
  • Positive expressions
  • Metaphors
  • Parallelism
  • The lexical field of education in the States

7
Barack Obama Speech Address to Joint Session
of Congress, Delivered on February 24, 2009
  • 1..The third challenge we must address is the
    urgent need to expand the promise of education in
    America.
  • In a global economy where the most valuable skill
    you can sell is your knowledge, a good education
    is no longer just a pathway to opportunity it
    is a pre-requisite.
  • Right now, three-quarters of the fastest-growing
    occupations require more than a high school
    diploma. And yet, just over half of our citizens
    have that level of education. We have one of the
    highest high school dropout rates of any
    industrialized nation. And half of the students
    who begin college never finish.
  • 4. This is a prescription for economic decline,
    because we know the countries that out-teach us
    today will out-compete us tomorrow. That is why
    it will be the goal of this administration to
    ensure that every child has access to a complete
    and competitive education from the day they are
    born to the day they begin a career.

8
(follows)
  • 5 Already, we have made an historic investment
    in education through the economic recovery plan.
    We have dramatically expanded early childhood
    education and will continue to improve its
    quality, because we know that the most formative
    learning comes in those first years of life. We
    have made college affordable for nearly seven
    million more students. And we have provided the
    resources necessary to prevent painful cuts and
    teacher layoffs that would set back our
    childrens progress.

9
(follows)
  • 6. But we know that our schools dont just need
    more resources. They need more reform. That is
    why this budget creates new incentives for
    teacher performance pathways for advancement,
    and rewards for success. Well invest in
    innovative programs that are already helping
    schools meet high standards and close achievement
    gaps. And we will expand our commitment to
    charter schools.
  • 7. It is our responsibility as lawmakers and
    educators to make this system work. But it is the
    responsibility of every citizen to participate in
    it. And so tonight, I ask every American to
    commit to at least one year or more of higher
    education or career training. This can be
    community college or a four-year school
    vocational training or an apprenticeship. But
    whatever the training may be, every American will
    need to get more than a high school diploma. And
    dropping out of high school is no longer an
    option. Its not just quitting on yourself, its
    quitting on your country and this country needs
    and values the talents of every American. That is
    why we will provide the support necessary for you
    to complete college and meet a new goal by 2020,
    America will once again have the highest
    proportion of college graduates in the world.

10
(follows)
  • I know that the price of tuition is higher than
    ever, which is why if you are willing to
    volunteer in your neighborhood or give back to
    your community or serve your country, we will
    make sure that you can afford a higher education.
    And to encourage a renewed spirit of national
    service for this and future generations, I ask
    this Congress to send me the bipartisan
    legislation that bears the name of Senator Orrin
    Hatch as well as an American who has never
    stopped asking what he can do for his country
    Senator Edward Kennedy
  • These education policies will open the doors of
    opportunity for our children. But it is up to us
    to ensure they walk through them. In the end,
    there is no program or policy that can substitute
    for a mother or father who will attend those
    parent/teacher conferences, or help with homework
    after dinner, or turn off the TV, put away the
    video games, and read to their child. I speak to
    you not just as a President, but as a father when
    I say that responsibility for our children's
    education must begin at home.

11
TEXT 9 President Obamas Inaugural Speech2Oth
January 2009. Some textual and rhetorical
characteristics
  • References to American historical and cultural
    legacy
  • 44 Americans have taken the presidential
    oath We the People founding documents Concord
    and Gettysburg, Normandy and Khe Sahn Our
    Founding Fathers drafted a charter Arlington
    the bitter swill of the civil war and
    segregation a man whose father less than sixty
    years ago might not have been served at a local
    restaurant can now stand before you to take a
    most sacred oath our values hard work and
    honesty, courage and fair play, tolerance and
    curiosity, loyalty and patriotism In the year of
    Americas birth, our revolution
  • Religious references
  • in the words of Scripture God-given promise
    patchwork heritage a nation of Christians and
    Muslims, Jews and Hindus and non-believers God
    calls on us to shape an uncertain destinywith
    eyes fixed on the horizon and Gods grace upon
    us
  • Metaphors journey (e.g. across the ocean, the
    West, refuse to let this journey end, with eyes
    fixed on the horizon), weather and natural
    phenomena (e.g. tides, storms, icy currents, in
    the coldest of months ), harness ( e.g. the sun
    and the wind and the soil to fuel our cars and
    run our factories)
  • Rhetoric built on repeated patterns (with
    variations)
  • For us, they packedFor us, they toiled For us,
    they fought
  • To the Muslim world To those leaders around the
    globeTo those who cling to power.
  • To the people of poor nations

12
OBAMAS Inaugural Speech versus Bushs Inaugural
speech (2005)
  • Results of a quantitative corpus-based analysis
  • OBAMA more occurrences of we, us and our
    may signal togetherness and sense of community
  • BUSH more occurrences of the words
  • liberty and freedom

13
OBAMAS Inaugural Speech
  • Qualitative analysis of freedom and
    liberty

only because they are guardians of our liberty,
but because they embody the spirit of service
ain destiny. This is the meaning of our liberty
and our creed - why men and women and c
the long, rugged path towards prosperity and
freedom. For us, they packed up their few
world Its power to generate wealth and expand
freedom is unmatched, but this crisis has
reminded us us, we carried forth that great gift
of freedom and delivered it safely to future
generations
14
Bushs Inaugural Speech in 2005Use of freedom
  • half century, America defended our own freedom by
    standing watch on distant borders. A
  • olerant, and that is the force of human freedom.
    We are led, by events and common sens
  • peace in our world is the expansion of freedom
    in all the world. America's vital inte
  • find their own voice, attain their own freedom,
    and make their own way. The great obj
  • able, and we will use it confidently in freedom's
    cause. My most solemn duty is to pro
  • oppression, which is always wrong, and freedom,
    which is eternally right. America will
  • e long run, there is no justice without freedom,
    and there can be no human rights witho
  • ades defined by the swiftest advance of freedom
    ever seen, is an odd time for doubt. Am
  • of our ideals. Eventually, the call of freedom
    comes to every mind and every soul. We
  • as Abraham Lincoln did "Those who deny freedom
    to others deserve it not for themselves
  • among free nations is a primary goal of freedom's
    enemies. The concerted effort of free
  • n, tens of millions have achieved their freedom.
    And as hope kindles hope, millions mor
  • gress, and one day this untamed fire of freedom
    will reach the darkest corners of our w
  • home - the unfinished work of American freedom.
    In a world moving toward liberty, we a
  • mise of liberty. In America's ideal of freedom,
    citizens find the dignity and security
  • will give our fellow Americans greater freedom
    from want and fear, and make our societ
  • just and equal. In America's ideal of freedom,
    the public interest depends on private
  • ay, and forever. In America's ideal of freedom,
    the exercise of rights is ennobled by
  • because we cannot carry the message of freedom
    and the baggage of bigotry at the same


15
Bushs Inaugural Speech in 2005Use of liberty
  • ry also has a visible direction, set by liberty
    and the Author of Liberty. When the De
  • re can be no human rights without human liberty.
    Some, I know, have questioned the glo
  • nse, to one conclusion The survival of liberty
    in our land increasingly depends on the
  • increasingly depends on the success of liberty
    in other lands. The best hope for peace
  • w, have questioned the global appeal of liberty -
    though this time in history, four dec
  • ined to show the meaning and promise of liberty.
    In America's ideal of freedom, citize
  • ence. This is the broader definition of liberty
    that motivated the Homestead Act, the S
  • in wave upon wave for a union based on liberty
    when citizens marched in peaceful outr
  • erica, in this young century, proclaims liberty
    throughout all the world, and to all th
  • rican freedom. In a world moving toward liberty,
    we are determined to show the meaning
  • our oppressors. When you stand for your liberty,
    we will stand with you. Democratic re

16
The American Constitution
  • We hold these truths to be self-evident, that
    all men are created equal, that they are endowed
    by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,
    that among these are Life, Liberty and the
    pursuit of Happiness

17
From The Websters on line Dictionary
  • FREEDOM
  • 1.The condition of being free the power to act
    or speak or think without externally imposed
    restraints.
  • 2. Immunity from an obligation or duty.
  • Also free (adjective)
  • To free ( verb
  • LIBERTY
  • 1. Immunity from arbitrary exercise of authority
    political independence.
  • 2. Freedom of choice "liberty of opinion"
    "liberty of worship" "liberty--perfect
    liberty--to think or feel or do just as one
    pleases" "at liberty to choose whatever
    occupation one wishes".
  • 3. Personal freedom from servitude or confinement
    or oppression.
  • 4. Leave granted to a sailor or naval officer.
  • 5. An act of undue intimacy
  • Also in the plural liberties

18
LIBERTY FREEDOM
  • From the Latin libertas
  • In the political American tradition, it is
    linked to the concept of independence. The
    government is the guardian of liberty
  • Less frequent in common usage (878 occurrences in
    the Brown Corpus)
  • Liberty and freedom tend to be used
    interchangeably in current political discourse
  • Some collocations The statue of liberty, civil
    liberties
  • From the Germanic free , linked to friend
  • In the political American tradition, it stresses
    common and shared political, economic and
    social rights
  • More frequent in common usage (3,916 occurrences
    in the Brown Corpus)
  • Liberty and freedom tend to be used
    interchangeably in current political discourse
  • Some collocations freedom of choice, freedom of
    speech, freedom from want and fear
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