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Linguistic Rhetoric of Soviet Discourse: Official vs Personal Register (J. Stalin – A. Dovzhenko)

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dc.contributor.author Potapenko, Serhiy
dc.date.accessioned 2021-04-07T13:44:47Z
dc.date.available 2021-04-07T13:44:47Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.citation Potapenko S. Linguistic Rhetoric of Soviet Discourse: Official vs Personal Register (J. Stalin – A. Dovzhenko) / A. Vorozhbitova, S. Potapenko, N. Khachaturova, Y. Khoruzhaya // Amasonia Investiga / Kherson State University – Херсон: ХГУ, 2020. - Volume 9. - Issue 29. - С. 224-233. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://rep.knlu.edu.ua/xmlui/handle/787878787/1406
dc.description.abstract Within the conception of the Sochi Linguistic & Rhetorical School the paper discusses the diglossia of the Soviet discourse employed in the former USSR, distinguishes official and personal registers as well as shows their difference drawing on Joseph Stalin’s speech of 31 January 1944 to the Politburo of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks concerning Alexander Dovzhenko’s screenplay “Ukraine in Flames” and in the writer’s diaries. The comparison reveals a few specific linguistic rhetorical features of cognitive communicative type ontologically characteristic of the Soviet linguistic personality’s communicative cognitive activity in a totalitarian state. The cognitive features of Stalin’s individual discourse representing the official register and his system of argumentation rest on the significative component of linguistic units, arguments from literature to illustrate the postulates and dogmas of Marxist-Leninist doctrine forming the foundation of the Soviet discourse. It is also found that the official register represented by Stalin’s speech is characterized by the following features: 1) repetition; 2) sarcastic remarks; 3) dramatic mutually exclusive contrast of mental spaces (“our own, true in the last resort” and destructed, represented by the opponent’s discourse); 4) rigidly adversarial characteristic of the alternative linguistic rhetorical worldview; 5) appeal to the Soviet collective linguistic personality’s opinion; 6) ideological translation from one subdiscourse into the other, from personal register into the official one; 7) biased retelling of the discourse regarded as anti-Soviet; 8) appeal to the facts lacking in the discourse under criticism; 9) “ideological editing” taking on the form of peremptory lecturing with consequences threatening the liberty of the person under criticism. The personal register of the Soviet Ukrainian writer Dovzhenko is characterized by a broad interpretation of reality devoid of the “Marxist-Leninist blinds” and a more objective interpretation of the world due to a bigger ratio of denotative references (“evidential arguments” like “I say” and “I heard” etc) and communicative cognitive activity relative to two axiological hierarchies: national and Christian, i.e. the dominance of human values over class morality. It is proved that Dovzhenko’s screenplay was criticized within Stalin’s official register for its deviation from the cognitive schemas and the model of the Soviet discourse, for the focus on Ukraine and its citizens rather than on class struggle. en_US
dc.language.iso other en_US
dc.publisher Amasonia Investiga en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Vol. 9;Issue 29
dc.subject Soviet discourse en_US
dc.subject official register en_US
dc.subject personal register en_US
dc.subject Sochi Linguistic & Rhetorical School en_US
dc.subject Stalin en_US
dc.subject Dovzhenko en_US
dc.title Linguistic Rhetoric of Soviet Discourse: Official vs Personal Register (J. Stalin – A. Dovzhenko) en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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