Record Details

A Rhetorical Analysis of a Daily Editorial: ‘Wishing Iraq Well’

Advances in Asian Social Science

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Field Value
 
Title A Rhetorical Analysis of a Daily Editorial: ‘Wishing Iraq Well’
 
Creator Fartousi, Hassan
 
Subject rhetorical figures, rhetorical structure, Generic Structural potential (GSP), daily editorial, zeugma, metonymy
 
Description The present study is an attempt to identify the rhetorical pattern and rhetorical devices that exist in an English editorial titled Wishing Iraq well. This editorial was published on December 19, 20011 in the New Straits Times (NST) –the oldest English daily tabloid newspaper- in Malaysia. The theoretical framework of this analysis is based on the Systemic Functional (SF) theory of language and genre (Halliday & Hasan, 1989) which proposes a generic pattern namely generic structural potential ( GSP) of text development for editorials. The data of the study were culled from the website of the newspaper: http://www.nst.com.my/opinion/editorial/wishing-iraq. The aim of the study is to identify the elements of generic structural potential (GSP), their sequence, and some rhetorical figures used throughout the editorial text. The findings revealed eight rhetorically structural elements which include Run-on Headline (RH), Addressing an Issue (AI), Providing Background Information (BI), Initiation of Argumentation (IA), Argumentation (A), Concluding Remarks (CR), Articulating a position (AP), and Articulating a Solution (AS). A number of rhetorical organizational devices/figures such as zeugma, altercasting, metonymy, alliteration, personality, parataxis, antithesis, etc. were discovered as devices of influencing and persuading readers. Sequence wise, the following GSP was explored and formulated
 
Publisher World Science Publisher
 
Contributor
 
Date 2012-03-29
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://worldsciencepublisher.org/journals/index.php/AASS/article/view/153
 
Source Advances in Asian Social Science; Vol 1, No 2 (2012); 197-204
2167-6429
 
Language eng
 
Relation http://worldsciencepublisher.org/journals/index.php/AASS/article/view/153/185
 
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