ORTHODOXY AND THE WORLD WEBSITE AS AN EXAMPLE OF MODERN RELIGIOUS DISCOURSE

Study of religious media discourse is a relatively new line of linguistic research notable for its integrated approach and interdisciplinary methodology. The object of this research is the Orthodoxy and the World website media texts exhibiting heterogeneity, since they are made up of verbal and visual components. Modern religious media discourse is an exceptionally productive area for identifying current mechanisms of meaning making, speech creation, and pragmalinguistics emerging in the age of indisputable dominance of the Internet as a basic communications system. In view of the above trends in the religious media discourse description, the methodology for studying symbiosis and interplay between verbal and video visual components of its main creation, the Internet text, takes on a particular significance. The linguistic media discourse theory studies influence and manipulation in Internet communication, where it is not just the lexical level of the language but not to a lesser extent the phraseological level that plays a prominent part. In the presented study, we have identified the following defining features of the religious media discourse: communication task diversity, mass character, which does not rule out certain elitism of the audience, expressiveness of the lexico-phraseological linguistic means, intertextuality, primarily based on Holy Writ texts. Analysis of the Orthodoxy and the World website media content attests to the fact that religious discourse holds its legitimate place in modern linguistics. (c) 2019 Published by Future Academy www.FutureAcademy.org.UK

Authors
Kunygina O.1 , Lomakina O. 2, 3, 4 , Makarova A. 5
Publisher
FUTURE ACAD
Language
English
Pages
507-514
Status
Published
Volume
66
Year
2019
Organizations
  • 1 South Ural State Univ Humanities & Educ, Dept Preuniv Educ & Career Guidance, 69 Lenin Ave, Chelyabinsk, Russia
  • 2 St Tikhons Orthodox Univ, Philol, 9 Ilovayskaya Str, Moscow, Russia
  • 3 St Tikhons Orthodox Univ, Philol Dept, 9 Ilovayskaya Str, Moscow, Russia
  • 4 Peoples Friendship Univ, Philol Dept, 6 Miklukho Maklaya Str, Moscow, Russia
  • 5 St Tikhons Orthodox Univ, Theol Dept, 6 Likhov Lane, Moscow, Russia
Keywords
Internet; mass media; religious content; religious media discourse
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