Symposium in Amsterdam, Formation of CDA, Work of the Founders

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Abstract

The chapter begins by briefly discussing the general domain of discourse analysis (DA) (including text linguistics), van Dijk’s (1985) Handbook of Discourse Analysis, and an explanation of how DA set the stage for the development of CDA. We then describe the emergence of critical discourse analysis (CDA) following a small symposium in Amsterdam in January 1991 about DA and a ‘critical’ approach to DA—which eventually became CDA. We describe briefly the events leading up to the symposium and what was accomplished there followed by the consolidation and development of CDA. Next, we discuss the five scholars at the meeting, beginning with a short description of Gunther Kress’s work before he decided to pursue his interests in education. We then move to a discussion of the work of Norman Fairclough, van Dijk, and Ruth Wodak, which includes detailed descriptions of their most important contributions before 1991, their work in the 1990s, in general their relation to what is now CDS/CDA, the productive professional collaboration of van Dijk and Wodak, and a special focus on Wodak’s role as promoter, biographer and historian of how CDA developed and changed over the years. We complete the chapter with a look at van Leeuwen’s work in SocSem, multimodality, and CDA.

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Catalano, T., & Waugh, L. R. (2020). Symposium in Amsterdam, Formation of CDA, Work of the Founders. In Perspectives in Pragmatics, Philosophy and Psychology (Vol. 26, pp. 71–154). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49379-0_3

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