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Dear Geographers,

In August 2019, Maastricht University organizes a Summer School course on Critical Discourse Analysis. Like the previous five editions, it  helps you to develop a sound analytical framework that can be applied to  study texts, images, or textual-visual representations. The course fee  is €600, and the course represents 2 ECTS.

Below you find more info on the course and reading recommendations. In case you have any questions,  please contact me at my RHUL e-mail account or [log in to unmask]

To apply for the course, please  visit Maastricht University website:  https://www.maastrichtuniversity.nl/education/contract/maastricht-summer-school

Kind regards,

Leonhardt


Dr. Leonhardt van Efferink
- Former PhD student at Royal Holloway, University of London<http://pure.rhul.ac.uk/portal/en/persons/leonhardt-van-efferink%284d30bc02-06f3-4dcf-a0ec-0e4df2bd6ca0%29.html>

- Summer School Course Leader at Maastricht University<https://www.maastrichtuniversity.nl/about-um/units/maastricht-summer-school>

- Facilitator | Trainer | Conference Speaker at GeoMeans<https://geomeans.com/>

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Critical Discourse Analysis Summer School (12-16 August 2019)
 Introduction: The campaigns of both supporters and opponents of BREXIT,
 the many photos on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and the debate on
 whether media should speak of immigrants or refugees underline the
 importance of language and images in (social) media. This course teaches
 you the skills to study the possible meanings of media texts and, if
 applicable, the juxtaposed images. You learn how particular words,
 phrases and visual elements can be interpreted in terms of a broader
 debate in society. Other key elements of the course are the role of the
 national and ideological context in the production of a media text, and
 the underlying power relations in society. Further, you learn how to
 develop a coherent analytical framework and structure for your research
 paper or thesis. In a step by process, you will address these questions
 by applying a critical discourse analysis (CDA) method. You will write a
 paper in which you will use the method of Richardson (2007), or a method
 of your own choice, to analyze discourses in one or more news articles
 or social media posts. Interactive lectures and roundtable discussions
 help you prepare for the different steps in the writing process.

 Goals:
 -Designing a framework to study discourses in (social) media, in line
 with your research objectives.
 -Developing a qualitative method to conduct critical discourse analysis
 of media representations and select the relevant textual (and possibly
 visual) elements.
 -Addressing the role of the national and ideological context in which
 media operate.
 -Understanding the complexity of text-image relations and their role in
 meaning-making processes.
 -Compiling a dataset for your dissertation or thesis that is manageable
 and relevant.

 Prerequisites:
 -Strong motivation and good command of English are essential to get a
 pass for the course;
 -Basic knowledge of textual analysis is recommended;
 -Aimed at Bachelor/ Master/ PhD students in Media Studies/ Journalism/
 Cultural Studies/ Linguistics/ Political Sciences/ International
 Relations/ Geography/ History. If in doubt, please contact Leonhardt for
 personal course selection advice.

 Recommended reading: Below you find some general reading suggestions. It
 is not required to do some reading before the course. If you like to
 read something, select the sources that are closest to your research
 interests. Alternatively, please ask Leonhardt for personal reading
 advice or check his website:
 http://www.geomeans.com/category/media-representations/reading-lists-media-representations/
 -Fowler, R. (1991) Language in the news. Discourse and ideology in the
 press.
 -Jørgensen, M. and Phillips, L. (2002) Discourse analysis. As theory and
 method.
 -Machin, D. (2007) Introduction to multimodal analysis.
 -Machin, D. and Mayr, A. (2012) How to do critical discourse analysis.
 -Reisigl, M. and Wodak, R. (2001) Discourse and discrimination.
 Rhetorics of racism and antisemitism.
 -Richardson, J. (2007) Analysing newspapers. An approach from critical
 discourse analysis.
 -Royce, T. D. (2006). Intersemiotic complementarity: A framework for
 multimodal discourse analysis. In T. D. Royce, & W. Bowcher (Eds.), New
 directions in the analysis of multimodal discourse (pp. 63-109).
 -Van Efferink, L. (2018) Our Research Paper Template for
 Textual/Visual/Multimodal Media Analysis.
 https://www.geomeans.com/our-research-paper-template-for-textual-visual-multimodal-media-analysis/
 -Van Leeuwen, T. (2008) Discourse and practice. New tools for critical
 discourse analysis.
 -Wodak, R. and Meyer, M. (eds., 2016) Methods of critical discourse studies.

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