THE CONCEPT OF IRADA(T) ASH-SHA‘B IN THE DISCOURSE OF THE ARAB SPRING
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Abstract
A series of revolutionary events that swept across the Arab countries over the period of 2010–2014 hailed as the “Arab Spring” has become a significant episode of the world history. A characteristic feature of these revolutionary events is the formation of a specific revolutionary discourse, common for a number of countries, which, against the backdrop of a share political culture, demonstrates a sustainable unity of themes, concepts, ideas and speech genres. The article analyzes some common structural and functional characteristics of the Arab Spring discourse. Based on a preliminary corpus of texts, the author examines a key concept of the revolutionary discourse IRADA(t) ASH-SHA‘B (will of the people).
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The Concept of IRADA(t) ASH-SHA‘B in the Discourse of the Arab Spring
Bogomolov A. Firmin the face of the enemy: semantic analysis of the concept of SUMUD in modern Arabic // Folia Orientalia. 2002. Vol. 38. 41–63.
Lakoff G. Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2002. https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226471006.001.0001
REFERENCES
Bogomolov A. (2002), “Firmin the face of the enemy: semantic analysis of the concept of SUMUD in modern Arabic”, in Folia Orientalia, Vol. 38, pp. 41–63.
Lakoff G. (2002), Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago. https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226471006.001.0001