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All Journal Lensa: Kajian Kebahasaan, Kesusastraan, dan Budaya Jurnal Bahasa dan Sastra ELT Worldwide: Journal of English Language Teaching VIVID Journal of Language and Literature English Review: Journal of English Education ATAVISME JURNAL ILMIAH KAJIAN SASTRA EXPOSURE JOURNAL English Teaching Journal : A Journal of English Literature, Language, and Education IDEAS: Journal on English Language Teaching and Learning, Linguistics and Literature Journal of English Language Studies Briliant: Jurnal Riset dan Konseptual Tell : Teaching of English Language and Literature Journal Wanastra : Jurnal Bahasa dan Sastra Linguistic, English Education and Art (LEEA) Journal NOBEL: Journal of Literature and Language Teaching JURNAL EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT JEELL (Journal of English Education, Linguistics and Literature) English Departement of STKIP PGRI Jombang Journal of English Language Teaching and Linguistics JENTERA: Jurnal Kajian Sastra International Journal for Educational and Vocational Studies Magistra Andalusia : Jurnal Ilmu Sastra Journal of English Education and Teaching (JEET) Jurnal Pengabdian Masyarakat Borneo Journal of Language and Literature English Focus: Journal of English Language Education SELL Journal Borneo Educational Journal (Borju) Interference: Journal of Language, Literature, and Linguistics JOLLT Journal of Languages and Language Teaching Linguistic, English Education and Art (LEEA) Journal Edukasia: Jurnal Pendidikan dan Pembelajaran Studies in English Language and Education ADJES (Ahmad Dahlan Journal of English Studies) Integrasi : Jurnal Ilmiah Teknik Industri
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Journal : Studies in English Language and Education

Speech acts and language styles of Biden’s victory speech for promoting peace values Fitri Rahmawati Astiandani; Slamet Setiawan; Ali Mustofa
Studies in English Language and Education Vol 9, No 2 (2022)
Publisher : Universitas Syiah Kuala

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (557.378 KB) | DOI: 10.24815/siele.v9i2.23047

Abstract

The importance of language in expressing ideas and ideologies has always been a focus of public debate in politics. The persons in charge of the reins of power become a source of concern, as well as the language they use. As a result, this research looks into the speech acts, language styles, and how they express peace values from Biden’s victory speech. A qualitative research design was used. Biden’s pragma stylistics and peace values were extracted from his victory speech in Wilmington, Delaware on November 7, 2020. This study focused on three aspects, namely: categories of illocutionary acts, language style based on sentence structure, and peace values. The data were analyzed following these stages: data condensation, data display, and drawing/verifying conclusions. The results showed that the most common illocutionary type employed in diverse language styles in Biden’s victory speech was commissive. Presumably, politicians have become accustomed to making promises or making commitments in order to entice citizens to vote for them. In addition, two types of peace values (inner peace and social peace) were discovered along with three types of language styles: parallelism, antithesis, and repetition (epizeuxis, anaphora, and anadiplosis), with more than half of the data employing parallelism as the language style. The majority of Biden’s speech focused on social peace to keep social life free of internal strife. 
Speech acts and language styles of Biden’s victory speech for promoting peace values Fitri Rahmawati Astiandani; Slamet Setiawan; Ali Mustofa
Studies in English Language and Education Vol 9, No 2 (2022)
Publisher : Universitas Syiah Kuala

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.24815/siele.v9i2.23047

Abstract

The importance of language in expressing ideas and ideologies has always been a focus of public debate in politics. The persons in charge of the reins of power become a source of concern, as well as the language they use. As a result, this research looks into the speech acts, language styles, and how they express peace values from Biden’s victory speech. A qualitative research design was used. Biden’s pragma stylistics and peace values were extracted from his victory speech in Wilmington, Delaware on November 7, 2020. This study focused on three aspects, namely: categories of illocutionary acts, language style based on sentence structure, and peace values. The data were analyzed following these stages: data condensation, data display, and drawing/verifying conclusions. The results showed that the most common illocutionary type employed in diverse language styles in Biden’s victory speech was commissive. Presumably, politicians have become accustomed to making promises or making commitments in order to entice citizens to vote for them. In addition, two types of peace values (inner peace and social peace) were discovered along with three types of language styles: parallelism, antithesis, and repetition (epizeuxis, anaphora, and anadiplosis), with more than half of the data employing parallelism as the language style. The majority of Biden’s speech focused on social peace to keep social life free of internal strife.