A comparative corpus-based ecological discourse analysis of Chinese, Indian, and American news reports on the Belt and Road Initiative (2013–2022)

This study employs corpus-based ecological discourse analysis to explore representations of the ecological attitudes in English-language news reports on China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in China, India, and the United States from 2013 to 2022. It reveals the media’s perception and attitude tow...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wei Ruby Rong, Hu Yanlan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2024-12-01
Series:Journal of World Languages
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/jwl-2023-1007
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846096862038196224
author Wei Ruby Rong
Hu Yanlan
author_facet Wei Ruby Rong
Hu Yanlan
author_sort Wei Ruby Rong
collection DOAJ
description This study employs corpus-based ecological discourse analysis to explore representations of the ecological attitudes in English-language news reports on China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in China, India, and the United States from 2013 to 2022. It reveals the media’s perception and attitude towards the BRI in these nations. The analysis reveals that media outlets in each country project different ecological stances using varied attitudinal resources. The Chinese media frequently deploy beneficial attitudinal resources to highlight the BRI’s achievements and advocate for broader international engagement. In contrast, the Indian media exhibit a balanced usage of beneficial, neutral, and destructive attitudinal resources, reflecting a prudent and observant attitude towards the BRI. The American media corpus displays a greater prevalence of neutral and destructive attitudinal representations over beneficial ones, suggesting a comparatively skeptical reception of the initiative. The study argues that these divergent patterns of ecological attitudes and the selection of attitudinal resources are shaped by factors such as economic development, geographical context, and social values.
format Article
id doaj-art-4dc6c9abd0c64f6d81fc93127a5ad84d
institution Kabale University
issn 2169-8260
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher De Gruyter
record_format Article
series Journal of World Languages
spelling doaj-art-4dc6c9abd0c64f6d81fc93127a5ad84d2025-01-02T05:56:55ZengDe GruyterJournal of World Languages2169-82602024-12-0110352854810.1515/jwl-2023-1007A comparative corpus-based ecological discourse analysis of Chinese, Indian, and American news reports on the Belt and Road Initiative (2013–2022)Wei Ruby Rong0Hu Yanlan1Department of Foreign Languages, 154610China University of Mining & Technology, Beijing, ChinaDepartment of Foreign Languages, 154610China University of Mining & Technology, Beijing, ChinaThis study employs corpus-based ecological discourse analysis to explore representations of the ecological attitudes in English-language news reports on China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in China, India, and the United States from 2013 to 2022. It reveals the media’s perception and attitude towards the BRI in these nations. The analysis reveals that media outlets in each country project different ecological stances using varied attitudinal resources. The Chinese media frequently deploy beneficial attitudinal resources to highlight the BRI’s achievements and advocate for broader international engagement. In contrast, the Indian media exhibit a balanced usage of beneficial, neutral, and destructive attitudinal resources, reflecting a prudent and observant attitude towards the BRI. The American media corpus displays a greater prevalence of neutral and destructive attitudinal representations over beneficial ones, suggesting a comparatively skeptical reception of the initiative. The study argues that these divergent patterns of ecological attitudes and the selection of attitudinal resources are shaped by factors such as economic development, geographical context, and social values.https://doi.org/10.1515/jwl-2023-1007attitude systemecological discourse analysisnews reportsthe belt and road initiative
spellingShingle Wei Ruby Rong
Hu Yanlan
A comparative corpus-based ecological discourse analysis of Chinese, Indian, and American news reports on the Belt and Road Initiative (2013–2022)
Journal of World Languages
attitude system
ecological discourse analysis
news reports
the belt and road initiative
title A comparative corpus-based ecological discourse analysis of Chinese, Indian, and American news reports on the Belt and Road Initiative (2013–2022)
title_full A comparative corpus-based ecological discourse analysis of Chinese, Indian, and American news reports on the Belt and Road Initiative (2013–2022)
title_fullStr A comparative corpus-based ecological discourse analysis of Chinese, Indian, and American news reports on the Belt and Road Initiative (2013–2022)
title_full_unstemmed A comparative corpus-based ecological discourse analysis of Chinese, Indian, and American news reports on the Belt and Road Initiative (2013–2022)
title_short A comparative corpus-based ecological discourse analysis of Chinese, Indian, and American news reports on the Belt and Road Initiative (2013–2022)
title_sort comparative corpus based ecological discourse analysis of chinese indian and american news reports on the belt and road initiative 2013 2022
topic attitude system
ecological discourse analysis
news reports
the belt and road initiative
url https://doi.org/10.1515/jwl-2023-1007
work_keys_str_mv AT weirubyrong acomparativecorpusbasedecologicaldiscourseanalysisofchineseindianandamericannewsreportsonthebeltandroadinitiative20132022
AT huyanlan acomparativecorpusbasedecologicaldiscourseanalysisofchineseindianandamericannewsreportsonthebeltandroadinitiative20132022
AT weirubyrong comparativecorpusbasedecologicaldiscourseanalysisofchineseindianandamericannewsreportsonthebeltandroadinitiative20132022
AT huyanlan comparativecorpusbasedecologicaldiscourseanalysisofchineseindianandamericannewsreportsonthebeltandroadinitiative20132022