Ambiguity, responsibility and political action in the UK daily COVID-19 briefings

Critical Discourse Studies 21 (1):76-91 (2024)
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper investigates how pronouns were used by UK government speakers to allocate responsibility to themselves and others in all 92 daily televised COVID-19 briefings that were held between March and June 2020. We identified the referent for every use of the first-person plural pronoun (1PL) as ‘inclusive’, ‘exclusive’, or 'ambiguous' and analysed the transitivity patterns in which these pronouns act as Participants. We argue that the UK government uses the inherent ambiguity of this pronoun to strategically mitigate their own responsibility for controlling the spread of the virus, while increasing the amount of responsibility to the general public. In doing so, we propose a transparent and replicable systematic method for identifying the referents of pronouns, which may be useful to other discourse analysts faced with the challenging task of pronoun resolution.

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David E. Wright
Texas A&M University (PhD)

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Coherence and Coreference.Jerry R. Hobbs - 1979 - Cognitive Science 3 (1):67-90.

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