SóProvas


ID
3045202
Banca
IDECAN
Órgão
Colégio Pedro II
Ano
2015
Provas
Disciplina
Inglês
Assuntos

Text VI.

                            Critical Discourse Analysis


      We have seen that among many other resources that define the power base of a group or institution, access to or control over public discourse and communication is an important "symbolic" resource, as is the case for knowledge and information (van Dijk 1996). Most people have active control only over everyday talk with family members, friends, or colleagues, and passive control over, e.g. media usage. In many situations, ordinary people are more or less passive targets of text and talk, e.g. of their bosses or teachers, or of the authorities, such as police officers, judges, welfare bureaucrats, or tax inspectors, who may simply tell them what (not) to believe or what to do.

      On the other hand, members of more powerful social groups and institutions, and especially their leaders (the elites), have more or less exclusive access to, and control over, one or more types of public discourse. Thus, professors control scholarly discourse, teachers educational discourse, journalists media discourse, lawyers legal discourse, and politicians policy and other public political discourse. Those who have more control over more ‒ and more influential ‒  discourse (and more properties) are by that definition also more powerful.

      These notions of discourse access and control are very general, and it is one of the tasks of CDA to spell out these forms of power. Thus, if discourse is defined in terms of complex communicative events, access and control may be defined both for the context and for the structures of text and talk themselves.

(van DIJK, T. A. Critical Discourse Analysis. In: SCHIFFRIN, D.; TANNEN, D.; HAMILTON, H. (eds.).   The Handbook of Discourse Analysis, Wiley‐Blackwell, 2003. pp. 352‐371.)

Identify the illocutionary force of the professor's utterance below:


Professor to Undergraduates during a class at the university: “How's that paper doing? It's due on Monday.”

(Adapted from: http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/dravling/illocutionary.html. Accessed on October 24, 2014.)

Alternativas
Comentários
  • (B)

    "Professor to Undergraduates during a class at the university: “How's that paper doing? It's due on Monday. ”

    A demand that the paper be brought on Monday.

    Tradução-->"Professor de Graduação em aula na universidade: “Como vai esse papel? É para segunda-feira. ”

    Uma exigência de que o jornal seja levado na segunda-feira.

  • b-

    He queries the students on their assignment with the intent to remind them of its deadline

    In speech-act theory, illocutionary force refers to a speaker's intention in delivering an utterance or to the kind of illocutionary act the speaker is performing.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illocutionary_act