This article demonstrates the value of rhetorical audience studies for analysing constructions of ‘the nation’ and national identity. A key strength of this approach is its recognition of the interplay between the rhetorical situation, the text of the speech, and the audience’s responses to that rhetoric. Using the historical method for investigating rhetoric and its reception, the article examines Theresa May’s efforts to bring the nation together after the 2016 referendum and to offer an inspiring vision of post-Brexit Britain. A textual analysis shows that her rhetoric of Britishness was constructed around an imagined audience of Leave voters, and thus excluded Remainers from her conceptions of Britain and ‘the British people’. The audie...
The 2016 EU referendum has already left a lasting imprint on the English language. Building on previ...
Theresa May has stated that the UK will trigger Article 50 before the end of March 2017. Iain Begg w...
International audienceFrom David Cameron, through Theresa May, to Boris Johnson, what Brexit means h...
This article demonstrates the value of rhetorical audience studies for analysing constructions of ‘t...
By way of Rhetorical Political Analysis, this article argues that May’s rhetoric on Brexit undermine...
This study analyses Theresa May's three seminal Brexit speeches. These describe the kind of desirabl...
This study of political discourse focuses on three selected texts about Brexit delivered by British ...
This study examines the leader’s speeches given by Prime Minister Theresa May during the years 2016–...
This study analyses Theresa May’s three seminal Brexit speeches. These describe the kind of desirabl...
What do the public in East Anglia, where both Leave (in rural Lincolnshire) and Remain (in Cambridge...
This qualitative study of British Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservative conference speech “Brita...
This study sets out to examine the British Prime Minister Theresa May’s speeches delivered through h...
Over the years, the rest of the European Union has got very used to being lectured at by British pri...
The purpose of this research is to investigate the illocutionary force uttered by Theresa May which ...
Political leaders used political speech that contained intentional purposes to suggest various polit...
The 2016 EU referendum has already left a lasting imprint on the English language. Building on previ...
Theresa May has stated that the UK will trigger Article 50 before the end of March 2017. Iain Begg w...
International audienceFrom David Cameron, through Theresa May, to Boris Johnson, what Brexit means h...
This article demonstrates the value of rhetorical audience studies for analysing constructions of ‘t...
By way of Rhetorical Political Analysis, this article argues that May’s rhetoric on Brexit undermine...
This study analyses Theresa May's three seminal Brexit speeches. These describe the kind of desirabl...
This study of political discourse focuses on three selected texts about Brexit delivered by British ...
This study examines the leader’s speeches given by Prime Minister Theresa May during the years 2016–...
This study analyses Theresa May’s three seminal Brexit speeches. These describe the kind of desirabl...
What do the public in East Anglia, where both Leave (in rural Lincolnshire) and Remain (in Cambridge...
This qualitative study of British Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservative conference speech “Brita...
This study sets out to examine the British Prime Minister Theresa May’s speeches delivered through h...
Over the years, the rest of the European Union has got very used to being lectured at by British pri...
The purpose of this research is to investigate the illocutionary force uttered by Theresa May which ...
Political leaders used political speech that contained intentional purposes to suggest various polit...
The 2016 EU referendum has already left a lasting imprint on the English language. Building on previ...
Theresa May has stated that the UK will trigger Article 50 before the end of March 2017. Iain Begg w...
International audienceFrom David Cameron, through Theresa May, to Boris Johnson, what Brexit means h...