"-" . . "The Role of Nationality Contrasts in the Discursive Construction of an Ingroup Member: the Woodward Case in the Telegraph"@en . "Social categorisation, as a process in which individuals are assigned certain values and qualities, is a context-dependent activity in which discourse (as a means of purposeful and goal-oriented communication through language) draws on various referential and predicational strategies. This process often involves the discursive construction of two mutually opposed groups - the ingroup and the outgroup, which are subject to affective treatment: typically positive self-presentation and negative other-presentation. This article documents the gradual positive presentation of an ingroup member charged with a criminal act in a foreign country, as identified in continued reporting of the case in the Electronic Telegraph. From a potentially deviant individual, and thus a possible representative of an outgroup comprising negatively perceived 'criminals' (be they convicted or suspected), the English au-pair Louise Woodward was re-constructed into a non-deviant member of the ingroup and assigned positive values."@en . . "CZ - \u010Cesk\u00E1 republika" . "The Role of Nationality Contrasts in the Discursive Construction of an Ingroup Member: the Woodward Case in the Telegraph"@en . . . "Sborn\u00EDk prac\u00ED Filozofick\u00E9 fakulty Brn\u011Bnsk\u00E9 univerzity, \u0158ada anglistick\u00E1: Brno Studies in English 33" . . "The Role of Nationality Contrasts in the Discursive Construction of an Ingroup Member: the Woodward Case in the Telegraph" . . . . . "Role n\u00E1rodnostn\u00EDch kontrast\u016F v diskurzivn\u00ED konstrukci p\u0159\u00EDslu\u0161n\u00EDka vlastn\u00ED skupiny: P\u0159\u00EDpad Louise Woodwardov\u00E9 v Telegrafu"@cs . "1"^^ . . . "14210" . "1"^^ . "Social categorisation, as a process in which individuals are assigned certain values and qualities, is a context-dependent activity in which discourse (as a means of purposeful and goal-oriented communication through language) draws on various referential and predicational strategies. This process often involves the discursive construction of two mutually opposed groups - the ingroup and the outgroup, which are subject to affective treatment: typically positive self-presentation and negative other-presentation. This article documents the gradual positive presentation of an ingroup member charged with a criminal act in a foreign country, as identified in continued reporting of the case in the Electronic Telegraph. From a potentially deviant individual, and thus a possible representative of an outgroup comprising negatively perceived 'criminals' (be they convicted or suspected), the English au-pair Louise Woodward was re-constructed into a non-deviant member of the ingroup and assigned positive values."@cs . "ingroup; ideological square; social categorisation; referential strategy; predicative strategy; Louise Woodward; discourse analysis; media discourse; bias"@en . "P(GA405/07/0652)" . "The Role of Nationality Contrasts in the Discursive Construction of an Ingroup Member: the Woodward Case in the Telegraph" . "RIV/00216224:14210/07:00020558" . "Role n\u00E1rodnostn\u00EDch kontrast\u016F v diskurzivn\u00ED konstrukci p\u0159\u00EDslu\u0161n\u00EDka vlastn\u00ED skupiny: P\u0159\u00EDpad Louise Woodwardov\u00E9 v Telegrafu"@cs . . . "1211-1791" . "18"^^ . . . "33" . "448210" . "[10C38935B11B]" . "Chovanec, Jan" . "RIV/00216224:14210/07:00020558!RIV08-GA0-14210___" . . . . . . . "27-44" . "Social categorisation, as a process in which individuals are assigned certain values and qualities, is a context-dependent activity in which discourse (as a means of purposeful and goal-oriented communication through language) draws on various referential and predicational strategies. This process often involves the discursive construction of two mutually opposed groups - the ingroup and the outgroup, which are subject to affective treatment: typically positive self-presentation and negative other-presentation. This article documents the gradual positive presentation of an ingroup member charged with a criminal act in a foreign country, as identified in continued reporting of the case in the Electronic Telegraph. From a potentially deviant individual, and thus a possible representative of an outgroup comprising negatively perceived 'criminals' (be they convicted or suspected), the English au-pair Louise Woodward was re-constructed into a non-deviant member of the ingroup and assigned positive values." .