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Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

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Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999. Hate speech and identity: An analysis of neo racism and the indexing of identity Discourse and Society, 2010. A Thorn by Any Other Name: Sexist Discourse as Hate Speech Discourse and Society, 2007. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Hate speech and identity: An analysis of neo racism and the indexing of identity Discourse and Society, 2010 A Lexico-Semantic Feature Analysis of Racist Hate Discourse Disertation Abstracts International, 2000 Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S. Discourse and Society, 1999 Re-In/citing: Linguistic Injuries: Speech Acts and Cyberhate Computers and Composition, 2001 A Thorn by Any Other Name: Sexist Discourse as Hate Speech Discourse and Society, 2007
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Page 1: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Hate speech and identity:

An analysis of neo racism

and the indexing of

identity

Discourse and Society, 2010

A Lexico-Semantic Feature Analysis of Racist Hate Discourse

Disertation Abstracts International, 2000

Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S.Discourse and Society, 1999

Re-In/citing: Linguistic Injuries:

Speech Acts and Cyberhate

Computers and Composition, 2001

A Thorn by Any Other Name: Sexist

Discourse as Hate Speech

Discourse and Society, 2007

Page 2: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

In search of…

The Language of Tolerance

Page 3: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

“I Have a Dream”

August 28, 1963Lincoln Memorial

# 1 Top 100 Speeches of the 20th Century

American Rhetoric

Page 4: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Address to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association

September 12, 1960Houston, Texas

“Fifty years ago…John Kennedy gave one of the best political speeches I ever heard, a plea for religious tolerance that has strange pertinence now…”

David Broder, Washington PostSeptember, 2010

Page 5: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Guiding premise:The boundaries of existing figured worlds can be expanded to inform new possible worlds.

“In the actual life of speech, every concrete act of understanding is active: it assimilates the word to

be understood into its own conceptual system...and is indissolubly merged with

the response…

Mikhail Bakhtin

Page 6: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

My Questions:How do the authorial voices of these speakers acknowledge

intolerance, discredit intolerance and begin moving toward a solidarity of tolerance?

In pursuit of this solidarity, how do their discourses orient to prior utterances and inflect them with new ideas?

How do the discourses ultimately construe the audience as agents of tolerance?

Page 7: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

My Methodology:Three passes through each speech

Pass 1: Discursive moves of inclusion and exclusion

Page 8: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

My Methodology:Three passes through each speech

Pass 1: Discursive moves of inclusion and exclusion

Pass 2: A search for use of common ground and the shifting of possible worlds

Page 9: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

My Methodology:Three passes through each speech

Pass 1: Discursive moves of inclusion and exclusion

Pass 2: A search for use of common ground and the shifting of possible worlds

Pass 3: Modal Markers (dreaming, wishing,

believing)

Page 10: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Blurring the lines between us and them

Creating a shared discursive world.

Click icon to add pictureKing:

But one hundred years later, the Negro is still not free.One hundred years later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination.One hundred years later, the Negro lives on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity.One hundred years later, the Negro is still

languished in the corners of American society and finds himself an exile in his own land.

Page 11: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Blurring the lines between us and them

The Inclusive “We”

Click icon to add pictureKing:

We [all of us] can never be satisfied as long at the Negro is the victim of police brutality.

We [the Negro community] can never be satisfied as long as our bodies, heavy with the fatigue of travel, cannot gain lodging in the motels of the highways and hotels of the cities. We [all of us] cannot be satisfied as long as the Negro’s basic mobility is from a smaller ghetto to a larger one.

Page 12: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Blurring the lines between us and them

“I”equals“We”

Click icon to add picture

Kennedy to ministers and nation…

I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute.

I believe in an America that is officially neither Catholic, Protestant nor Jewish.I believe in an America…where religious liberty is so indivisible that an act against one church is treated as an act against all.

Page 13: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Ambiguous blame

A place not a people

Click icon to add pictureKing:

Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given the Negro people a bad check…We have also come to this hallowed spot to remind America

of the fierce urgency of Now.

Page 14: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Ambiguous blame

Are you the people you say you are?

Click icon to add pictureKennedy:I believe in an America where…no Protestant minister would tell his parishioners for whom to vote…I believe in an America …where no man

is denied public office merely because his religion differs from the President who might appoint him or the people who might elect him.I believe in a President whose views on religion are his own private affair, neither imposed by him upon the nation or imposed by the nation upon him.

Page 15: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Building on common ground

Putting co-texts in new contexts

Click icon to add picture“…a speaker who uses …audiences’ own habits of thought, values and predisposition…in a way brings the audience to persuade itself.”

Ruth Wodak

Page 16: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Modal manipulation

An invitation to partake in the possible

Click icon to add pictureKennedy: I believe…(10 times)

King: I have a dream…(10 times)

Page 17: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Address to the 2008 Democratic National Convention

Barack Obama

Coming soon:

Do the consistencies of tolerant discourse hold a half century later?

Page 18: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

My conclusions (so far):Language of tolerance…is built on a disorienting accumulation of discursive moves

Page 19: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

My conclusions (so far):Language of tolerance …must empower listeners as agents of change.

Page 20: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

My conclusions (so far):Language of tolerance…not a language of revolution but evolution.

Page 21: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

There will always be an “other.”Learning to replicate the language of tolerance may provide a clearer path to repeating the best—not worst—

of human history.

Page 22: Hate Speech and First Amendment Absolutism Discourses in the U.S . Discourse and Society, 1999

Comments and Questions

Janet PalmisanoEnglish 611 Fall 2010


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