Shouting and interrupting in parliamentary communication as elements of staged dialogue (on the example of parliamentary debates in the German bundestag)

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This article is devoted to the study of shouting from the spot and interrupting the speaker as mechanisms of effective and persistent influence on the public. Shouting and interruptions are one of the standard means of communication in the parliamentary dialogue, which is essentially a complex exchange of views. The authors attempt to systematize the functions of shouting and interruptions in the institutional parliamentary discourse on the example of debates in the German Bundestag. Since the broadcast of the plenary debates to the general public by the mass media shows the need to play pre-prescribed roles, the deputies resort to various statements focusing the merits of their party and the shortcomings of opponents or defocusing the blunders of their own party and the achievements of competing political forces.

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Political discourse, parliamentary communication, shouting, interruptions, staged dialogue

Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/170201156

IDR: 170201156   |   DOI: 10.24412/2500-1000-2023-10-2-154-157

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