Mediated Discourse Analysis: Tracking Discourse in Action
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Date
2013-08
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Routledge
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Abstract
Mediated discourse analysis, sometimes called nexus analysis (Scollon & Scollon, 2004), is an action-oriented approach to critical discourse analysis that takes sociocultural activity as its primary focus, looking closely at a physical action as the unit of analysis rather than an ethnographic event or a strip of language (e.g., utterance, turn of talk). In this way of thinking about activity, every action is simultaneously co-located within a local embodied community of practice (Lave & Wenger, 1991) and a far-reaching nexus of practice, the expected and valued ways of interacting with materials among people. The purposes of MDA are
1. to locate and make visible the nexus of practice-a mesh of commonplace practices and shared meanings that bind communities together but that can also produce exclusionary effects and reproduce inequitable power relations;
2. to show how such practices are made up of multiple mediated actions that appropriate available materials, identities, and discourses;
3. to reveal how changes in the smallest everyday actions can effect social change in a community’s nexus of practice.
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This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in New Methods of Literacy Research on 22 August 2013, available online: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203104682.
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Wohlwend, K. E. (2014). Mediated discourse analysis: Tracking discourse in action. In P. Albers, T. Holbrook & A. S. Flint (Eds.), New methods in literacy research (pp. 56-69). New York: Routledge.
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Book chapter