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E-raamat: Quantifying Approaches to Discourse for Social Scientists

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This book provides an overview of a range of quantitative methods, presenting a thorough analytical toolbox which will be of practical use to researchers across the social sciences as they face the challenges raised by new technology-driven language practices. The book is driven by a reflexive mind-set which views quantifying methods as complementary rather than in opposition to qualitative methods, and the chapters analyse a multitude of different intra- and extra-textual context levels essential for the understanding of how meaning is (re-)constructed in society. Uniting contributions from a range of national and disciplinary traditions, the chapters in this volume bring together state-of-the-art research from British, Canadian, French, German and Swiss authors representing the fields of Political Science, Sociology, Linguistics, Computer Science and Statistics. It will be of particular interest to discourse analysts, but also to other scholars working in the digital humanities and with big data of any kind. 
Part I Introductory Remarks
1(48)
1 Understanding Twenty-First-Century Societies Using Quantifying Text-Processing Methods
3(20)
Ronny Scholz
2 Beyond the Quantitative and Qualitative Cleavage: Confluence of Research Operations in Discourse Analysis
23(26)
Jules Duchastel
Danielle Laberge
Part II Analysing Institutional Contexts of Discourses
49(72)
3 The Academic Dispositin Towards a Context-Centred Discourse Analysis
51(38)
Julian Hamann
Jens Maesse
Ronny Scholz
Johannes Angermuller
4 On the Social Uses of Scientometrics: The Quantification of Academic Evaluation and the Rise of Numerocracy in Higher Education
89(32)
Johannes Angermuller
Jhed van Leeuwen
Part III Exploring Corpora: Heuristics, Topic Modelling and Text Mining
121(92)
5 Lexicometry: A Quantifying Heuristic for Social Scientists in Discourse Studies
123(32)
Ronny Scholz
6 Words and Facts: Textual Analysis---Topic-Centred Methods for Social Scientists
155(28)
Karl M. van Meter
7 Text Mining for Discourse Analysis: An Exemplary Study of the Debate on Minimum Wages in Germany
183(30)
Gregor Wiedemann
Part IV New Developments in Corpus-Assisted Discourse Studies
213(102)
8 The Value of Revisiting and Extending Previous Studies: The Case of Islam in the UK Press
215(36)
Paul Baker
Tony McEnery
9 The Linguistic Construction of World: An Example of Visual Analysis and Methodological Challenges
251(34)
Noah Bubenhofer
Klaus Rothenhausler
Katrin Affolter
Danica Pajovic
10 Multi-method Discourse Analysis of Twitter Communication: A Comparison of Two Global Political Issues
285(30)
Jorn Stegmeier
Wolf J. Schunemann
Marcus Muller
Maria Becker
Stefan Steiger
Sebastian Stier
Index 315
Ronny Scholz coordinates the ERC-funded DISCONEX project on academic discourses at the University of Warwick, UK. He holds a Master degree in discourse studies from the University Paris XII and a PhD in sociology and linguistics from Magdeburg and Paris-Est. His work focuses on the question of legitimisation of power in political discourses especially in the post-democratic era. He uses lexicometric tools as quantifying heuristic helping to explore new perspectives in various corpora of political discourse.