학술논문

Trump's January 6 Address: Hate Speech or Freedom of Speech? A Transdisciplinary Study
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Humanities and Applied Social Sciences, Vol 4, Iss 5, Pp 438-456 (2022)
Subject
Trump’s January 6 discourse
Textual analysis
Socio-cognitive analysis
Philosophical analysis
Social sciences (General)
H1-99
Language
English
ISSN
2632-279X
Abstract
Purpose – This research is a critical discourse analysis (CDA) of Trump's speech on January 6, 2021, which results in his supporters' storming the US Capitol in order to challenge certifying Biden's victory. The Democrats accused Trump of incitement of insurrection. Consequently, Trump was impeached. This article investigates Trump's speech to label it as hate speech or free speech. Design/methodology/approach – Analytical framework is tri-dimensional. The textual analysis is based on Halliday's notion of process types and Huckin's discourse tools of foregrounding and topicalization. The socio-cognitive analysis is based on Van Dijk's ideological square and his theory of mental models. The philosophical dimension is founded on Habermas's theory of discourse. These parameters are the cornerstones of the barometer that will be utilized to reach an objective evaluation of Trump's speech. Findings – Findings suggest that Trump usually endows “I, We, You” with topic positions to lay importance on himself and his supporters. He frequently uses material process to urge the crowds' action. He categorizes Americans into two conflicting poles: He and his supporters versus the media and the Democrats. Mental models are created and activated so that the other is always negatively depicted. Reports about corruption are denied in court. Despite that, Trump repeats such reports. This is immoral in Habermas's terms. The study concludes that Trump delivered hate speech in order to incite the mob to act in a manner that may change the election results. Originality/value – The study is original in its tri-dimensional framework and its data of analysis.