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Academic literature on the topic 'Satire politique télévisée'
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Journal articles on the topic "Satire politique télévisée"
Ducharme, Francis. "Satire d’une télévision publique en dérive." Dossier 39, no. 1 (February 24, 2014): 45–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1022992ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Satire politique télévisée"
Davis, Wlodarczyk Laura. "Étude dialogique et comparative de l'ironie et du détournement dans les JT satiriques français et américains en contexte d'élections présidentielles." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Montpellier 3, 2022. https://ged.scdi-montpellier.fr/florabium/jsp/nnt.jsp?nnt=2022MON30029.
Full textThe satirical news program is a genre that recycles discourse circulating within traditional media in order to create the satirical mise-en-scène of a news broadcast. This dissertation investigates the construction of meaning of certain discursive devices within this genre, as expressed in French and American shows. We attempt to specifically pinpoint the sociocultural tendencies and principles that shed light on the way they function. Our corpus is composed of two TV programs from each culture: The Daily Show and Last Week Tonight in the American sub-corpus; C'est Canteloup and Les Guignols in the French sub-corpus. We set thematic and temporal specifications for the collection of our corpus. As the chosen theme is the presidential elections, every episode in the 50-day period before the respective presidential election of each country was recorded: September 19-November 11, 2016, for the American corpus and March 18-May 17, 2017, for the French corpus. Our methodology is based on the notion of dialogism (Bakhtine, 1970 [1929], 1984, 1987 [1975]) that establishes the social nature of language in discourse by which human beings construct their own speech in view of the speech and the thoughts of others. In this dissertation, we carry out a dialogic analysis of the process of meaning production by studying the linguistic and contextual elements that the speaker-enunciator puts into play when using discursive devices. We take into account specifically the observable verbal and paraverbal traces of the voice of the other. Our study is both qualitative and quantitative in nature. We propose a study of two specific devices: verbal irony and discursive detournement. On one hand, we describe in this study the concrete occurrences of the two devices as they are expressed in satirical news programs. On the other hand, we show the usages of these devices in each culture while clarifying the impact of sociocultural parameters on the production of satiric and parodic discourse. Based on the contrastive study of two corpora originating from two linguistically and culturally distinct communities, we have discerned certain resemblances and differences according to the device in use. We observed that the discursive device's function influences which sociocultural images and knowledge are mobilized, perceptible by the discursive sources that are incorporated. Detournement serves globally to (i) create a humoristic complicity between the producers and the recipients and (ii) form playful associations between two referents, in order to make fun of one of them. To do this, both corpora turn to similar types of cultural references, mainly from pop culture. In the case of verbal irony that primarily has a critical function, we observed the incorporation of different enunciative sources, depending on the culture, which seems to reflect certain sociocultural values of the respective community
Books on the topic "Satire politique télévisée"
SATIRE and the STATE. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.
Find full textSATIRE and the STATE. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.
Find full textFotis, Matt. Satire and the State: Sketch Comedy and the Presidency. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.
Find full textFotis, Matt. Satire and the State: Sketch Comedy and the Presidency. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.
Find full textFotis, Matt. Satire and the State: Sketch Comedy and the Presidency. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.
Find full textFotis, Matt. Satire and the State: Sketch Comedy and the Presidency. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.
Find full textLate Night with Trump. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.
Find full textLichter, S. Robert, and Stephen J. Farnsworth. Late Night with Trump. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.
Find full textLichter, S. Robert, and Stephen J. Farnsworth. Late Night with Trump: Political Humor and the American Presidency. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.
Find full textLichter, S. Robert, and Stephen J. Farnsworth. Late Night with Trump: Political Humor and the American Presidency. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.
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