Faculté des Lettres et des Langues

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    The Arabic Translation of Buzzwords in Political Discourse Within an Ideological and Media Perspective
    (2023) Chabbi, Rahil; Aloui, Asma (Supervisor)
    This dissertation examines the relationship between translation, politics, and ideology in English political discourse. Three main research questions are set to investigate the strategies used in order to successfully convey the meaning from English into Arabic, how our believes and the spread of ideologies are closely intertwined with media representations and finally how do the Arabic audience receive and interpret the English political buzzwords. In this matter, the information documented all along this humble work is cited and declared by official sources, drawing on multiple samples of political speeches from American sources such as: Fox News, The White House site, Aljazeera, Al Arabiya...etc. Furthermore, this study is conducted using a qualitative method, which contributes in the analysis of the extracts of multiple samples of political buzzwords from varied political speeches, which are translated from English to Arabic and compared for any inconsistencies in meaning or context. The aim of this dissertation is to examine the ways in which media influence the translation of political buzzwords and the implications of these translations for political discourse and ideology, considering the main focus which is the Arabic audience and culture. Across three chapters, the study answers the research questions and offers important insights into the intersection of translation, politics, and media in the Arabic context. Ultimately, the findings resulted from this research present a valuable contribution to our understanding of the ways in which translation and ideology shapes political discourse in contemporary societies, and how media affects our understanding on multiple levels.
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    The 24th of February 2022, Russian President Speech, and its Interpretation and Representation in News Reports: Corpus Assisted Critical Discourse Analysis Approach
    (2023) M’zir, Lydia; Aloui (Supervisor)
    The present study adopts a corpus-assisted critical discourse analysis (CDA) in the investigation of online news articles in major news portals and their presentation and interpretations of the 24th February 2022, Russian President’s speech. Through the analysis of eight online news articles from eight news outlets namely: The Washington Post, The Times of India, CGTN, The Guardian, The Toronto Star, Russia Today, Tehran Times, and Al Jazeera, the aim of this research is to demonstrate how the linguistic behavior of the selected articles. Likewise, it explores, ideology, power dynamics, and bias in the production of discourse to report the Russian President speech. Norman Fairclough’s three-dimensional model of CDA is taken as a theoretical framework to examine quantitatively and qualitatively the discursive practices namely reporting verbs, labeling, news sources, and negative framing in order to showcase the news outlet’s bias toward their countries’ ideological and political orientations. The study found that all of the selected articles displayed variation and imbalance, indicating that the presented discourse was aligned with the respective governments' stances on the issue under study.