Means of Expressing and Implying Emotions and Impoliteness in Croatian and Montenegrin Public Discourse
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2015Metadata
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Poznanskie Studia Slawistyczne 2015(9):121-146 http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/pss.2015.9.8Abstract
This article addresses means of expressing and implying emotions (Langlotz, Locher 2012) in
realizations of impoliteness in written discourse thematizing language and identity in Croatian and
Montenegrin media in 2010 and 2011. Realizations of impoliteness often relate to communicating
an emotional stance that can trigger emotional responses in readers. Our discourse sample can be
described as “disputes about language and identity” (cf. Felberg, Šarić 2013), which is largely char
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acterized by conflictual disagreements. Conflictual disagreements, as Jones (2001) or Langlotz
and Locher (2012) put it, do not leave one cold in face-to-face interaction: they arouse feelings of
annoyance, irritation, anger, or contempt directed to the communicative partner. These observa
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tions are relevant in our context, although we deal with written discourse. The main participants
in our data include well-known intellectuals, journalists, and editors. They all defend or attack
a position in discussing, among other things, “how similar ‘our’ language (Croatian/Montenegrin)
is to ‘their’ language” (Serbian), and “what makes this language (Croatian/Montenegrin) a
distinc
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tive and independent entity”. These participants clearly position themselves in relation to other
participants. Their positioning of the self and the other person involves negative identity-ascribing
practices. Taking into consideration parameters such as the role of participants in discourse and
society, context, co-text, and activity types in which discourse participants engaged, we identi
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fied various highly context-dependent types and functions of impoliteness realizations (cf. Šarić,
Felberg 2015). Contrary to our expectations, the participants in the media discourse in both coun
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tries frequently use impoliteness both strategically and systematically while defending their posi
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tions. The impoliteness realizations point to emotively significant places in discourse. Their use
has several functions: a
prominent one is coercion through legitimizing one’s own standpoints and
delegitimizing those of one’s opponents.