Diplomatic Language as a Reflection of a Political Stance Regarding the Conflict in Eastern Ukraine
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Date
2021-12
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Publisher
Tavrida National V.I. Vernadsky University
Abstract
The paper features the results of a content analysis of the speeches delivered at the 8726th meeting
of UN Security Council on the situation in eastern Ukraine held on 18 February 2020, with
the specific goal to explore the correlation between certain speech markers and the political stand
of the speaker, in this particular case – each member country’s stance on the agenda and the extent
they choose to show their position between the two parties of the conflict, Russia and Ukraine.
As a genre of diplomatic discourse, speeches delivered at the UN Security Council meetings are
expected to be carefully balanced in terms of the language and restrained in terms of emotions. Thus,
any cases of deliberate emotionality, explicit evaluation of other participants’ actions and deviation
from diplomatic impartiality and ambiguity are meant to signal the speaker’s distinctive position
on the agenda. The analysis resulted in singling out language markers that break with the traditional
matter-of-fact tone of diplomats’ speeches on such occasions, the major of them being the use
of emotive vocabulary, emphatic syntax, metaphors, hyperboles, idioms, evaluative language, labelling,
accusatory rhetoric, modal verbs denoting obligation and determination. The hypothesis that
the more frequent is the use of these markers in a speech, the more clearly the speaker wants to show
the position of his/her country regarding the parties of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, has been
fully confirmed. In our analysis, we also looked at two auxiliary markers, the number of mentions
of proper names identifying the parties to the conflict and the length of speeches. The first of them
showed that the participants’ desire to “annoy” Russia is directly proportional to the number of Russia’s
mentions in their speeches. The length of speeches also in most cases turned out to be indicative
of the speaker’s intention to clearly show their position between the conflicting parties. Characteristically,
China’s representative’s speech appeared to be not only devoid of any counter-matter-of-fact
markers, i.e. the most generally and neutrally phrased, but also the briefest.
Description
Keywords
diplomatic language, diplomatic speech, counter-matter-of-fact markers, emotional language, evaluative language, political stance, conflict in Eastern Ukraine
Citation
Sydorenko S.I. Diplomatic Language as a Reflection of a Political Stance Regarding the Conflict in Eastern Ukraine // Vchenі zapyski TNU іmenі V. І. Vernads'kogo. Series: Philology. Journalism. – Volume 32 (71). –No 5. – Part 1. – 2021. – P. 178-185.