The 2003 war in Iraq was a major media event which led to a series of controversial issues. One of those issues was the role of the embedded reporter who became a key figure in television coverage, accompanied by claims of ‘selling-out’ to the Pentagon. One way of approaching the question of whether embeds consciously, or unconsciously projected the coalition’s perspective is by means of the relatively new methodology of Corpus-Assisted Discourse Studies (CADS). This paper explores the possibilities of CADS as a research tool and how it can be applied to a research question.

“A CADS analysis of television reports from Iraq: were embeds ‘in bed’ with the coalition?”

CLARK, CAROLINE MARY DE BOHUN
2008

Abstract

The 2003 war in Iraq was a major media event which led to a series of controversial issues. One of those issues was the role of the embedded reporter who became a key figure in television coverage, accompanied by claims of ‘selling-out’ to the Pentagon. One way of approaching the question of whether embeds consciously, or unconsciously projected the coalition’s perspective is by means of the relatively new methodology of Corpus-Assisted Discourse Studies (CADS). This paper explores the possibilities of CADS as a research tool and how it can be applied to a research question.
2008
Corpora for University Language Teachers
119
128
C. Clark
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/69287
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