k 2012

Should You Be Persuaded - Testimonies in Phone Hacking Inquiry (News of the World case in the summer of 2011)

KATRŇÁKOVÁ, Hana

Basic information

Original name

Should You Be Persuaded - Testimonies in Phone Hacking Inquiry (News of the World case in the summer of 2011)

Authors

KATRŇÁKOVÁ, Hana (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution)

Edition

The 6th Conference on Translation, Interpreting and Comparative Legilinguistics, Poznan (Poland), 2012

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Prezentace na konferencích

Field of Study

60200 6.2 Languages and Literature

Country of publisher

Poland

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14640/12:00064694

Organization unit

Language Centre

Keywords in English

interview; formality; persuasion; social actors; modality; discourse analysis and conversation analysis
Změněno: 8/4/2013 11:23, PaedDr. Marta Holasová, Ph.D.

Abstract

V originále

The purpose of the paper is to look at conversation management of interviewers - members of the Parliamentary Committee and strategies used by witnesses, who were assumed to have some awareness of bad practices and thus possibly breaching the law. The PEACE method of interviewing was adopted; interviewers seemed to be aware of the Code of Practice used in England and Wales, which defines the interview as "the questioning of a person regarding their involvement or suspected involvement in a criminal offence or offences"(Home Office 2008:37). Although the people invited for the interview to give evidence were called witnesses, there was a suspicion that they might have had some awareness of improper practices, which is illustrated in the linguistic analysis. Transcripts of highly formal televised interrogation were used to analyse strategies of individual speakers. The analysis did not work with recordings so no implications were made regarding phonological analysis. The paper uses for the analysis transcripts from oral evidence given by James Murdoch, Rupert Murdoch, Rebekah Brooks and Sir Paul Stephenson before the Culture, Media and Sport Committee of the UK Parliament. Full transcripts are freely accessible from the internet. The linguistic analysis included discourse analysis and conversation analysis, pragmatic analysis and the analysis of Hallidayan Social Actors and modality.