Cross-Cultural Realities In The Journalistic Discourse And Their Significance In Foreign Language Learning
Year:
2016Published in:
Advanced EducationThe paper examines the journalistic discourse as a linguistic phenomenon in the socio-cultural realities. The relevance of the study is determined by the great interest of linguistic science to the issues of cross-cultural communication and their significance in teaching English as a foreign language. The journalistic discourse is a peculiar phenomenon of linguistics because it reflects socio-cultural features of specific communication space; it creates a language picture of the world of a certain culture and society through the specific socio-cultural lexical units – realities. The main aim of the study is to examine, analyze, summarize and systematize socio-cultural linguistic resources as a means of creating and transmitting linguistic awareness, revealing the pragmatic aspects of their functioning in the journalistic discourse. In order to achieve this goal the following steps have been taken: 1) to study the characteristics of the journalistic discourse; 2) to determine the specific genres of the journalistic discourse of the English language periodicals and mass media on-line resources; 3) to investigate the cognitive and pragmatic features of the vocabulary functioning, which reflect the peculiarities of the English language context of the socio-cultural aspect of the journalistic discourse; 4) to categorize and analyze the thematic and typological groups of socio-cultural realities and study their functions in the context. The possible application of the obtained results is to develop the scientific and teaching facilities in the field of foreign language learning and translation.
Related by author
9 publications found
The Multidirectional Turn in the Literature about Holocaust in Post‑Euromaidan Ukraine (On the Material of Sofia Andrukhovych’s
Publisher: Teksty Drugie
Authors: Yuliya Ilchuk
Hearing The Voice Of Donbas: Art And Literature As Forms Of Cultural Protest During War
Publisher: Nationalities Papers
Authors: Yuliya Ilchuk
From Russian Literature to Russian‑Language Literature of the Empire
Publisher: Ab Imperio
Authors: Yuliya Ilchuk
Nikolai Gogol'’s Self‑Fashioning in the 1830s: The Postcolonial Perspective
Publisher: Canadian Slavonic Papers
Authors: Yuliya Ilchuk
The Recontextualization of History in Anatoly Kuznetsov’s
Publisher: Eastern European Holocaust Studies
Authors: Yuliya Ilchuk
Memory As Forgetting In The Prose Fiction Of Serhiy Zhadan And Volodymyr Rafieienko
Publisher: The Slavic and East European Journal
Authors: Yuliya Ilchuk
Gogol's Hybrid Performance: The Creation, Reception And Editing Of “Vechera Na Khutore Bliz Dikanki” (Evenings On A Farm Near Dikan'Ka)
Publisher: University of Southern California
Authors: Yuliya Ilchuk
How Ukrainian Peasants Were Taught to Read: Khrystyna Alchevs’ka’s, Borys Hrinchenko’s, and S. An‑skii’s Reading Experiments at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
Publisher: Україна Модерна
Authors: Yuliya Ilchuk
Nikolai Gogol: Performing Hybrid Identity
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Authors: Yuliya Ilchuk
You have reached the end of the list