Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. — 285 pages. — (Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 7688). — ISBN 978-3-642-41544-9, e-ISBN 978-3-642-41545-6.
International Workshop, Political Speech 2010, Rome, Italy, November 10-12, 2010, Revised Selected Papers
This book stems from the International Workshop “Political Speech”, held at the University Roma Tre (Rome, Italy) during November 10th and 12th, 2010. The event was funded by the FP7 European Network of Excellence SSPNet (Social Signal Processing Network, G.A. n. 231287), and was organized in collaboration with GSCP (Gruppo di Studio della Comunicazione Parlata), a section of SLI (Italian Linguistics Society).
The OratorMultimodal Indicators of Persuasion in Political Interviews
Towards a Political Action
An Ethnographic Investigation into Gender and Language in the Northern Ireland Assembly
Intonation in Political Speech: Ségolène Royal vs. Nicolas Sarkozy
A Diachronic Analysis of Face-to-Face Discussions: Berlusconi, from 1994 to 2010
The AudienceCounterfactual Communication in Politics: Features and Effects on Voters
The New Release of CORPS: A Corpus of Political Speeches Annotated with Audience Reactions
Multimodal Behaviour and Interlocutor Identification in Political Debates
Political Leaders’ Communicative Style and Audience Evaluation in an Italian General Election Debate
The Discourse: ContentsSometimes I, Sometimes Me: A Study on the Use of Autobiographical Memories in Two Political Speeches by Barack Obama.
Communicating Politics. A Study on the Representations of the 2008 Electoral Campaign in the Italian Daily Press
Certain-Uncertain, True-False, Good-Evil in Italian Political Speeches
Discrediting Body. A Multimodal Strategy to Spoil the Other’s Image
Racism and Immigration in Social Advertisings Promoted by Italian Government and Non-governmental Institutions
The Discourse: StructuresPolitolinguistics. Towards a New Analysis of Political Discourse
Linguistic Factors in Political Speech
Fallacies as Argumentative Devices in Political Debates
Sprinkled Metonymies in the Analysis of Political Discourse with Corpus Linguistics Techniques: A Case Study