2015
DOI: 10.1080/10350330.2015.1046216
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Social distance and the multimodal construction of the Other in sectarian song

Abstract: This paper introduces the concept of "tonal gravity" through a multimodal analysis of a YouTube video to demonstrate how multimodality is key to the construction of "Rule Britannia" as a sectarian song. The analysis focuses upon the multimodal semiotics of social distance which has been a key concept in sociological and anthropological traditions in recent times. This concept offers a means to understand the social semiotic relationship between Self and Other in multimodal discourse. Following previous work in… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…The aim of this paper is to present a systemic-functional semiotic approach that allows to analyse music in multimodal contexts revising the relations music establishes with verbal and visual modes. We adopt Kress and van Leeuwen’s adaptation of Halliday’s proposal (1996–2020) for the visual mode, and include categories described by McKerrell (2015) and van Leeuwen (1999) for music. According to our perspective, music not only works cohesively with the narrative to establish tension and resolution of conflicts but also interact with verbal and visual modes building ideational meaning and emotional framing.…”
Section: Music Narratives and Discoursementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The aim of this paper is to present a systemic-functional semiotic approach that allows to analyse music in multimodal contexts revising the relations music establishes with verbal and visual modes. We adopt Kress and van Leeuwen’s adaptation of Halliday’s proposal (1996–2020) for the visual mode, and include categories described by McKerrell (2015) and van Leeuwen (1999) for music. According to our perspective, music not only works cohesively with the narrative to establish tension and resolution of conflicts but also interact with verbal and visual modes building ideational meaning and emotional framing.…”
Section: Music Narratives and Discoursementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As O’Halloran has noted, the need for a multimodal perspective lays on the fact that language use is not thought as an isolated phenomenon (2014: 1). Therefore, analysis of communication must centre in images, visual design, television, newspapers, monuments, toys and also in and through music (McKerrell, 2015: 1). Discourse is conveyed in different modes, not just the verbal, hence the multimodal definition of text as the material manifestation of ideas through different modes.…”
Section: Music Narratives and Discoursementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…40–41). While some have focused on the use and interpretation of anti-Catholic music in Scotland (McFarland 1990; McKerrell 2012, 2015; Davies 2013; Millar 2015), there has been little academic analysis of the use of Irish rebel songs (Boyle 2002), which some consider to be anti-Protestant 11 . This article explores the social function and cultural perception of Irish rebel songs in the west coast of Scotland, examining what qualities lead to a song being perceived as ‘sectarian’, by focusing on song lyrics, performance context and extra-musical discourse.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%