Rhetorical Analysis of King Abdullah's English Speeches during the Covid-19 Pandemic

Authors

  • Hanan Amaireh English Department, Philadelphia University, Jordan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35516/hum.v50i1.4414

Keywords:

Covid-19, Ethos, King Abdullah II, logos, pathos, rhetoric

Abstract

This paper analyses King Abdullah's II English speeches during the Covid-19 crisis in a corpus-based study. It investigates the rhetorical techniques employed by the King to convince the audience. The data include 14 English speeches (8,694 words) delivered by King Abdullah II of Jordan during the Covid-19 crisis, from January 2020 to August 2021. The rhetorical analysis is based on the classical Aristotelian classification of rhetoric. It examines one canon of rhetoric, invention. In the analyzing invention, the speaker's ethical appeals (ethos), emotional appeals (pathos), and logical appeals (logos) will be examined in detail in a corpus-based study. The analysis reveals that King Abdullah II employs ethical appeals to identify himself with the audience and create a rapport with them by using first-person pronouns and lexical items like "my friends". The quantitative analysis shows that the inclusive pronoun we and the pronoun I am used for rhetorical reasons to convince the audience. Direct and indirect emotional appeals are also used to stir the audience's emotions to call them to action. King Abdullah II uses logical arguments such as an argument from statistics, quoting from the Holy Quran, and an argument from a dilemma, inter alia, to convince the audience of his viewpoints and persuade them to do specific actions.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Al Bzour, A. (2019). Rhetorical Stylistic Device in Political Speech: Metaphor of King Abdullah II's English Speeches. Literary Endeavour, 10(5), 15-21.

Al-Hammed, M. (1991). Political discourse analysis: An Arabic − English contrastive case study. Unpublished MA. Thesis. Yarmouk University, Jordan.

Al-Harahsheh, A. (2013). The Translatability of Figures of Speech in Khalid Mishaal's Political Speeches: A Critical Discourse Analysis. International Journal of English Linguistics, 3(3), 100-114.

Al-Haq, F., & Al-Sleibi, N. (2015). A critical discourse analysis of three speeches of King Abdullah II. US-China Foreign Language, 13(5), 317-332.

Alkhawaldeh, A. (2021). Persuasive Strategies of Jordanian Government in Fighting Covid-19. GEMA Online® Journal of Language Studies, 21(1), 274-293.

Al-Osaimi, M. (2000). The politics of persuasion. Riyadh: King Faisal Centre for research and Islamic studies.

Al-Rawabdeh, N. (2005). Art of argumentation and persuasion in the political speeches of His Majesty King Abdullah II maintained in their Arabic translation. Unpublished MA. Thesis, Yarmouk University, Jordan.

Alyeksyeyeva, I., Kaptiurova, O., & Orlova, V. (2021). World War Flu: War Rhetoric of the Australian Prime Minister on Coronavirus. 3L: Language, Linguistics, Literature, 27(1), 90–101

Amaireh, H. (2013). A rhetorical analysis of the English speeches of Queen Rania of Jordan. Doctoral dissertation, University of Aberdeen, UK.

Aristotle. (1984) Rhetoric: The Complete Works of Aristotle (Vol. 2). Barnes, J. (ed.) Princeton University Press.

Bakri, T., Tahir, M., & Pujiningtyas, A. (2021). "Joko Widodo’s Speech after the Constitutional Court Decision; Representation of Ideology and Power". International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science, 5(3), pp. 574-579.

Borg, J. (2010). Persuasion: The art of influencing people. Britain: Pearson Education Limited.

Brown, G., & Yule, G. (1983) Discourse. Cambridge University Press.

Charteris-Black, J. (2018). Analysing political speeches. Macmillan International Higher Education.

Cook, G. (1989). Discourse. Oxford University Press.

Cockcroft, R., & Cockcroft, S. (1992). Persuading people: An introduction to rhetoric. Basingstoke: Macmillan.

Corbett, E. (1990). Classical Rhetoric for the Modern Student. New York: Oxford University Press.

Ehninger, D. and Brockriede, W. (2008). Decision by debate. New York: International Debate Education Association.

El-Zu’bi, N. (2002). The translatability of emotive expressions in the political speeches of His Royal Highness Prince El-Hassan Bin Talal. Unpublished MA Thesis. Yarmouk University, Jordan.

Harb, G., & Serhan, Y. (2020). Exploring the use of Covid-19 as a new pre-text in Trump’s political discourse. Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Studies, 2(5), 20-30.

Harris, Z. (1952). "Discourse Analysis: A Sample Text". Language, 289(1), 1-30.

Hammood, A. & Abdulqadir, M. (2020). "A Critical and Textual Discourse Analysis of Donald Trump’s Speech on Coronavirus". Iraq University Journal. 47(3), 531-538.

Iqbal, Z., Aslam, M., Aslam, T., Ashraf, R., Kashif, M., & Nasir, H. (2020). "Persuasive power concerning COVID-19 employed by Premier Imran Khan: A socio-political discourse analysis". Register Journal, 13(1), 208-230.

Islentyeva, A. (2020). "On the Front Line in the Fight against the Virus: Conceptual Framing and War Patterns in Political Discourse". Yearbook of the German Cognitive Linguistics Association, 8(1), 157–180.

Jarrah, M. (2018). "Rhetorical Features of the Ousted Arab Presidents' Speeches: A Discourse Analysis Approach". The Arab Journal for Arts, 15(2), 875-900.

Jaworska, S. (2021). "Competence and collectivity: The discourse of Angela Merkel’s media communications during the first wave of the pandemic". Discourse, Context & Media, 42, 1-9.

Harb, G. & Serhan, Y. (2020). "Exploring the use of Covid-19 as a new pre-text in Trump’s political discourse". Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Studies, 2(5), 20-30.

Jinshuang, L., & Rong, L. (2020). "A positive discourse analysis of diplomatic speech of President Xi in Covid-19". IETI Transactions on Social Sciences and Humanities, 8, 24-31.

Lanham, R. (1993). A Handlist of rhetorical terms (2nd). London, Los Angeles: the University of California Press.

Mahmood, T., Bhatti, M., & Akbar, M. (2020). "Appeals in Political Rhetoric about Covid19: Political Discourse Analysis of Speeches by Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan". Global Political Review, 5(2), 11-21. https://doi.org/10.31703/gpr.2020 (V-II).02

Metcalf, A. (2004). Presidential Voices: Speaking Styles from George Washington to George W. Bush. New York: Houghton Mifflin Company.

Mohammed, A. (2019). "The Linguistic Functions in King Abdullah II of Jordan Speeches". International Journal of Applied Linguistics and English Literature, 8(1), 1-9.

O’Connell, D. (2015). God Wills It: Presidents and the Political Use of Religion (1st). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203790595

O’Keefe, D. (1990). Persuasion: Theory and research. London: Sage Publications.

Olimat, S. (2020). "Words as Powerful Weapons: Dysphemism in Trump’s Covid-19 Speeches". 3L: Language, Linguistics, Literature®, 26(3), 17-30.

Paltridge, B. (2006). Discourse Analysis: An Introduction. Continuum.

Prill, P. (1987). "Rhetoric and Poetics in the Early Middle Ages". Rhetorica, 5 (2): 131. doi:10.1525/rh.1987.5.2.129.

Rezaei, S., & Nourali, N. (2016). "Language and power: The use of persuasive techniques in Iran and U.S. president speeches". Journal of Language Teaching and Research, 7(6), 1203- 1209.

Richards, J. (2008). Rhetoric. New York: Routledge.

Sadeq, A. (2019). "Simile and Personification of King Abdullah II's English Speeches as Rhetorical Stylistic Devices in Political Speech". Literary Endeavor, 10(15), 22-27.

Saeed, U., Aslam, M., Khan, A., Khan, M., Atiq, M. & Bhatti, H. (2020). "Rhetorical and Persuasive Strategies Employed by Imran Khan in his Victory Speech: A Socio-Political Discourse Analysis". International Journal of English Linguistics. 10(2). 349-356.

Serrieh, N. (2017). A stylistic analysis of the English speeches of His Majesty King Abdullah II bin Al-Hussein of Jordan. Unpublished MA Thesis. Philadelphia University, Jordan.

Shunnaq, A. (2000). Arabic English translation of political speeches. Perspectives: Studies in Translatology, 8(3), 207-228.

Sloane, T. (2001). Encyclopedia of Rhetoric. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Sproule, M. (1980). Argument: language and its influence. London: McGraw-Hill Book Company.

Stubbs, M. (1983). Discourse Analysis. Basil Blackwell.

Tannen, D., Hamilton, H., & Schiffrin, D. (2018). Handbook of Discourse Analysis (2nd).UK: Wiley Blackwell.

Yu, L. (2020). "Analysis of the Queen’s Speech on COVID-19 from the Perspective of Transitivity". Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 11(6), 7–11.

Zakariya, M., Chojimah, N., & Nurhayani, I. (2019). "Rhetoric and Discourse in Political Speeches". Alphabet, 1(2), 95-102.

العقيلي، مازن، يعقوب، سوزان. (2019 ). "تحليل الخطاب السياسي للملك عبدالله الثاني ابن الحسين وأثره في التنمية البشرية في الأردن ( "(2015- 1999. دراسات، العلوم الإنسانية والاجتماعية: 46 (3): 150- 173

Websites:

https://kingabdullah.jo/en/speeches. Accessed 24 July 2021

https://kingabdullah.jo/en/page/profile. 1 August 2021

Software:

AntConc 3.2.1w (Windows). Developed by Laurence Anthony Faculty of Science and Engineering. Waseda University, Japan.

Downloads

Published

2023-01-30

How to Cite

Amaireh , H. . (2023). Rhetorical Analysis of King Abdullah’s English Speeches during the Covid-19 Pandemic. Dirasat: Human and Social Sciences, 50(1), 311–323. https://doi.org/10.35516/hum.v50i1.4414

Issue

Section

Articles