Who Benefits from the Sanitized Language of Violence?
Abstract
Language is not neutral; it determines, and is determined, by perspective. This volume explores the role of an influential vocabulary of war, sanitised language, the language that seeks to clean up the appearance of events through euphemism, abstract words and opaque phrases. Critical discourse analysis of the language of recent military campaigns shows that the public authorities do not explain events as clearly as they might. Despite social, political and strategic incentives to use sanitised language, its use appears to undermine the democratic process and reduce public authorities’ freedoms, possibly emboldening adversaries and turning away potential partners.
Keywords
Iraq; Libya; civilian casualties; communications; double speak; drones; public understanding; strategic communications; surrogacy; trustDOI
10.1163/9789004696426ISBN
9789004696426, 9789004696419, 9789004696426Publisher
BrillPublisher website
https://brill.com/Publication date and place
2024Imprint
NijhoffClassification
Language learning: writing skills