Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Introduction
Over the last two decades, critical discourse analysis (CDA) has become an established academic tradition a development which has not challenged CDAs pluralistic character
(Wodak, 2001a, p. 11, 2001b, p. 64; Wodak & Weiss, 2005, p. 124). Thus, despite many overlaps, Teun van Dijk (2008, p. 822) suggests that CDA should not be understood as a uniform
school but as a heterogeneous movement. Of course, CDA shares a focus on the embeddedness
of semiosis in social contexts, on discourse as the social activity of meaning-making through
(written/spoken) language, bodily expressions and/or sounds. Therefore, discourses are seen
as crucial in the (re)production of the social although being both enabled and constrained
by other, material, factors. It is the role of discourse in the (re)production of unjustified discrimination and inequalities, the way discourses obscure (but can also denaturalise) such power
relations, which forms the common interest of CDA (cf. Fairclough & Wodak, 1997).
However, at the same time CDA, as a diverse movement, entails various methodologies and
epistemological positions. In particular with regards to the latter, attempts to ground a critical
stance thus rest on different giants. That is, CDAs different approaches are orientated
towards different epistemological underpinnings ranging from Foucauldian poststructuralism
to normatively rich theories like the Frankfurt School (cf. Wodak & Meyer, 2009).1
How CDA validates and grounds its own critical standards is therefore not easy to answer. Its
pluralism in theoretically justifying critique is, however, held together by a few basic convictions: hidden power structures should be revealed, unjustified discrimination and inequality
have to be fought, and the analyst has to reflect on her/his own position and make her/his standpoint transparent. Having said that, van Dijk (2008, p. 823) has recently nevertheless pointed to
Email: b.forchtner@lancaster.ac.uk
B. Forchtner
the lack of theory about the norms and principals of its [CDAs] own critical activity. A
detailed account of these principles and their theoretical grounding which goes beyond a selfreflective stance and the aim of making power structures transparent is indeed necessary as a
lack of justification causes problems. For example, academic communities are often based on
a progressive consensus and committed to a seemingly self-evident (more or less) humanist
agenda. However, can or should such conventions define what has to be critiqued, our notions
of critique and emancipation, our moral position? I assume that this alone is not convincing
enough to ground a socially transformative teleology (McKenna, 2004, p. 9). Without an extensive elaboration of why ones critique is particularly reliable, one encourages accusations of
being unprincipled and biased (cf. Hammersley, 1997, or more polemical Widdowson,
2004 and Stubbs, 1997). Furthermore, clarifying ones own grounds helps to avoid self-righteous
blaming of other approaches as uncritical (Billig, 2003). Thus, a progressive consensus which is
biased and proud of (van Dijk, 2001, p. 96) taking a standpoint has to justify theoretically
why its understanding of particular social circumstances should (and could) be rejected.
In this article I argue that, in the case of the discourse historical approach (DHA), what is
needed when approaching this issue is rather a matter of clarification and explicitness. While the
DHA shares CDAs core orientation, among the various strands in CDA, it has most consistently
referred to the Frankfurt School as the foundation of its critical stance. Thus, it takes on an explicitly modern standpoint, claiming what ought and ought not to be on the basis of emancipatory
reasoning. However, indeed, such a moral stance has to be theoretically justified.
I start by reviewing how the DHA has justified its critique by referring to the Frankfurt
School. I then review works of the Frankfurt School, in particular The dialectic of enlightenment,
Negative dialectics and Jurgen Habermass language-philosophy. This double review enables
me in a third step to make explicit those theoretical assumptions which underlie CDAs critical
standard, as well as evaluating the benefits and problems for the DHA resulting from this.
Finally, I summarise my findings.
The discourse historical approach and the Frankfurt School
The DHA bases its critique on a foundational notion of emancipation. Although not unique to the
DHA, its core orientation as an interdisciplinary, socially transformative force echoes Horkheimers opening speech as director of the Institute for Social Research in 1931.2 However, with
regards to the grounding of its critical stance, and it is only this aspect which is of relevance
to this article, the DHA differs from other approaches to CDA as it adheres to the Frankfurt
School (Reisigl & Wodak, 2001, p. 32, cf. also Fairclough & Wodak, 1997, p. 261; Reisigl,
2003, pp. 82ff, 147ff; Reisigl & Wodak, 2009, p. 88; Wodak, 1996, pp. 28 31, 2001a, pp. 2,
9f; Wodak & Meyer, 2009, p. 6f). Locating itself in this tradition leads the DHA to formulate
its call
for emancipation, self-determination and social recognition . . . [which] is motivated by the perhaps
utopian conviction that unsatisfactory social conditions can, and therefore must, be subject to methodological transformation towards fewer social dysfunctional and unjustifiable inequalities. (Reisigl
& Wodak, 2001, p. 34)
On the one hand, the DHAs general understanding of critique remains in line with other
approaches to CDA. Critical interventions aim to reveal and demystify power structures from
the perspective of those who suffer (Fairclough & Wodak, 1997, p. 258; Wodak, 2001a,
p. 10). Enabling informed choices through a self-reflective stance (Reisigl & Wodak, 2001,
p. 265; Wodak, 2001b, p. 65) and a rejection of a know-that-all or know-it-better attitude
(Reisigl & Wodak, 2001, p. 265) also remain shared goals. However, the particularity of the
DHA already becomes visible in its three-dimensional conceptualisation of critique (Reisigl &
Wodak, 2001, pp. 32f, 268; Wodak, 2001b, p. 65):
.
On the other hand, a closer reading of the seminal works of the DHA demonstrates a series of
specific propositions concerning its understanding of critique which are linked to the Frankfurt
School. Although we find references to Horkheimer and Adorno, in particular The dialectic of
enlightenment, in the DHA (Reisigl & Wodak, 2001, p. 32ff., 2009, p. 88), and Fairclough &
Wodak (1997, p. 261) mention their insistence on the role of culture in the reproduction of
the capitalist social order, the only detailed comments refer to the work of Habermas. For
example, Ruth Wodak (2001a, p. 2) quotes Habermas as saying that language is also a
medium of domination and social force. It serves to legitimize relations of organized power.
Not surprisingly, references to Habermass ideal speech situation (ISS) can be found too
(Wodak, 1996, pp. 28 31) which Fairclough and Wodak (1997, p. 261) see as a utopian
vision of interaction. In her more detailed account of Habermas, Wodak (1996, p. 30) mentions
the utopia of an ideal speech situation which is characterised by the absence of any constraints. Following Habermas, Wodak also rejects the idealisation of an ISS in saying that
communication always presupposes an ISS otherwise communication would be impossible
(see below). In what follows, she claims that distorted communication is to be identified by
comparing an ISS with the situation being analysed. According to Wodak (1996, p. 28), this
enables emancipation through self-reflection.
As CDA critiques real life, so the DHA is concerned with language-in-use and perceives discourse as a form of social practice (Fairclough & Wodak, 1997, p. 258). In other words: discourse is action. Here, Martin Reisigl (2003, p. 90) identifies a problem for the implementation
of Habermas in his politolinguistic framework as he interprets Habermas as setting discourse in
strict opposition to action. Thus, Habermas would even fall behind the insights of the linguistic
turn. Connected to this issue, Reisigl (2003, p. 82f) stresses that for Habermas there is a difference between discourse and critique: while discourse is necessarily reciprocal and thus related
to issues of truth and rightness critique is rather unidirectional and related to therapeutic or
aesthetic questions. Reisigls own conceptualisation (2003, p. 89) seeks to avoid this by understanding discourse as an empirical concept. However, he stresses that he does not misunderstand
the Habermasian notion of discourse as idealist, but accepts the idea that discourses are necessary regulative and normative frames of interaction. This leads Reisigl and Wodak (2001,
pp. 263 271; cf. also Koller & Wodak, 2008; Wodak, 2009, p. 196f) to argue strongly in
favour of Habermass inclusive, deliberative concept of democracy as an emancipatory way
of integrating plural societies.
Based on the outline above, it is not surprising that Reisigl and Wodak (2001, p. 265) claim
that the DHA is able to:
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contribute greatly to answering the question of what are good reasons because such an approach
provides criteria, which enable one to distinguish between manipulative and suggestive procedures
of persuasion and discursive procedures of convincing argumentation.
Consequently, contesting manipulation is the central aim of the DHA. In order to help answer the
question of what good reasons are, Reisigl and Wodak (2001, p. 70ff) refer to Franz van
Eemeren and Rob Grootendorsts rules for rational arguing. For Reisigl and Wodak (2001,
p. 71), these rules should form the basis of a discourse ethics on which a political model of discourse, deliberative democracy . . . can be grounded. According to van Eemeren and Grootendorst (2004, pp. 158 186), violations of these rules, i.e. fallacies, mark manipulative practices
which can be identified and critiqued. In order to support their empirical analysis, Reisigl and
Wodak (2009, p. 100ff) have more recently linked this concept of fallacies with the Habermasian
concept of validity claims in order to analyse an actors claims and their potentially fallacious
use (see below).
Before I evaluate these claims made by the DHA, let me turn to proponents of the Frankfurt
School and review their different groundings of critique.
The Frankfurt School: from The dialectic of enlightenment to Negative dialectics
Although the The dialectic of enlightenment (Horkheimer and Adorno, 1973) is not quoted,
Reisigl and Wodak (2001, p. 32ff, 2009, p. 88) refer at least twice to the book as a point of reference for the DHA. I start by briefly recapitulating the main theses of the book. I will then turn to
Adornos (1973) Negative dialectics which although not mentioned in the DHAs canon so far
will further help to illustrate the problems of grounding a critical position in the work of
Horkheimer and Adorno.
The dialectic of enlightenment
Exploring why humanity instead of realising its potential for good produces Nazism,
Fascism, Stalinism and mass culture, Horkheimer and Adorno aim to critique not just capitalism.
Instead, they investigate the primal history of the human species itself, that is, its violent stepping out of its entanglement in nature. For Horkheimer and Adorno (1973, pp. 54 56), in order
to survive, the species had to, from the very beginning, master both its inward and outward
natures via (self-)restriction, cunning and renunciation. According to them (1973, p. 54;
Adorno, 1973, p. 149), domination and reification are thus not primarily products of capitalist
socialisation but constitute the nucleus of all civilizing rationality. Instrumental reason thus
emerged which, Horkheimer and Adorno (1973, p. xiv) claim, has created a new iron cage in
which individuals are wholly devalued [annulliert] and public opinion, as well as language,
become simple commodities (1973, p. xif., cf. also p. 147). However, their petitio principii
remains that a rational socialisation is possible (Horkheimer & Adorno, 1973, p. xiii).
From this emerges an aporia: how is rational, emancipatory critique possible if our reasoning
takes place within such a totally, bureaucratically administered world system? Such a verwaltete
Welt must, by definition, make immanent transcendence impossible.
Negative dialectics
Continuing on from The dialectic of enlightenment, Adornos Negative dialectics aims to
enlighten society and lift reason to a higher level by critiquing its instrumental aspects.
However, this is radicalised by linking domination to thinking itself. According to Adorno,
every act of dealing with an object does harm to this object by not acknowledging its full
richness. Adornos (1973, p. 146) key claim is that identifying thought, that is, to identify
something, is necessarily a violent act as it reduces an object to only one or a few of its ontological characteristics. What cannot be rationalised in this process of identification is excluded.
Consequently, Adorno (1973, p. 146) states that: Identity is the primal form of ideology and
strives for a method designed to forgo the need for argument (Adorno, 1982, p. 1). What
makes rationality indeed rational in Adornos eyes (1973, p. 18) is not the cognitive act of thinking but philosophical contemplation and non-conceptual mimesis, e.g. in moments of deep affection for a piece of art, that is, an intuitive act which holds opportunity for reconciliation with the
object. At the same time, Adorno (1973, p. 15) claims that it is only by way of the concept to
transcend the concept as [t]hinking without a concept is not thinking at all (p. 98). In order to
bring together the unavoidable necessity of conceptual thinking and the rejection of identifying
thought, Adorno proposes a methodical tool: constellations. These are arrangements of concepts
around the central one, thereby expressing what that concept aims at, not to circumscribe it to
operative ends (Adorno, 1973, p. 166). Elaborating this tool further, Adorno (1973, p. 163)
employs the metaphor of a lock which is not to be opened by a single key, but a constellation
of numbers. The critical analyst is thus supposed to present ensembles of models, e.g. in aphoristic form (cf. Adorno, 1974), which circulate around the concept, thereby throwing light on it
instead of providing an analytic definition.
However, even if the aporia between a need for conceptual thinking and the unavoidable violence it does could be overcome and emancipation thus became possible via constellations and
mimetic moments, Adorno (1973, p. 145) himself remains doubtful about grounding his critical
position and about the possibility of immanent transcendence: What would be different has not
begun yet.
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becoming aware of norms as being societal products; and the subjective world, i.e. subjects
which can view themselves from the perspective of a third person.
For Habermas, this leads to different ways of how agents relate to these worlds in either an
instrumental/strategic or a communicative manner. Instrumental action refers to the non-social
objective world. Far more relevant here is action which is based on agents calculation of
success, taking into account a second agents decisions. Here, Habermas (1984, pp. 85, 87f)
speaks of strategic action. Strategic action is purposive-rational by aiming to influence the
other in order to fulfil the speakers perlocutionary intentions. However, as such a mode
cannot integrate societies, Habermas (1984, p. 101) proposes a second, prior mode of social
action, communicative action, which is orientated towards understanding (but not to be
equated with communication in general). Although communicative action does not dispense
with goal-oriented action as something, i.e. agreement on something, which is still to be
achieved, it is only via communicative action that subjects coordinate their interaction and
create lasting, shared definitions and meaning.
Communicative action is only possible due to the formal pragmatic properties of every conversation. Habermas (1984, p. 99) calls these properties validity claims: whenever we say something meaningful, we implicitly or explicitly raise the claim that our utterance is true, right and/
or truthful. These claims commit the participants by creating a social bond. Here, Habermas
relies on John Austins (1975) speech-act theory. For Habermas, the binding or illocutionary
force of performative clauses can rest on three different validity claims: (a) a truth claim,
Austins constative element, e.g. I hereby say that he is there; (b) a rightness claim as normative utterances have a force too and can be right or wrong, e.g. I hereby claim that killing is bad;
(c) a truthfulness claim, referring to the degree of honesty in our daily self-representation, e.g. I
hereby promise to come back. By raising such claims, we might get caught up in an argument,
have to justify the claim and, thereby, accept the peculiar constraint-free force of the better
argument (Habermas, 1984, p. 28) in order to coordinate action. Habermas sees that this
force of the better argument will always be restricted to a certain degree, e.g. exchanges of
arguments cannot last forever. Habermas (1976, p. 3) thus speaks of gray areas between the
extremes of pure strategic and communicative action, an aspect he (1996) has recently further
developed. Habermas (1976, p. 1) also acknowledges the strategic use of validity claims in
order to deceive the listener but insists that strategic action is only a derivate of action oriented
to reaching understanding. For example, lying only succeeds because, under normal
circumstances, we expect the others claims to be true, right and/or truthful. Otherwise,
the idea of lying would not work. To that extent, communicative action precedes strategic
action.3
For example, a teacher might suggest that, because the day will be hot, the remaining classes
should take place outside. She could simply force the pupils to do so by way of her professional
authority. However, she could also tell the class that she listened to the weather forecast and thus
knows the day will be hot (truth claim). She could add that the rooms will soon be stuffy and that
some pupils might thus be unfairly disadvantaged due to declining concentration (rightness
claim). By pointing out, linguistically and/or via her body language, that she really thinks
classes would not be enjoyable if they were to be held inside (truthfulness claim), a communicative act would be performed. After a brief discussion, the pupils might agree and move outside.
Alternatively, some could reject her suggestions by pointing to widespread hay-fever among
them and that classes outside would worsen their condition. In both cases, a binding, shared definition would be established not through constraint (or relatively little) but the force of the
better argument. Habermas therefore understands rationality not in terms of the capacity of a
monologically working mind, i.e. self-reflection, but as a property of intersubjectivity where validity claims can be raised and refuted freely.
According to Habermas, the ISS cannot be seen as a deviation from an ideal, the blueprint of a
concrete form of life to come but as a counterfactually anticipated, pragmatically necessary
presupposition of every meaningful interaction (2008, p. 27). Habermas (1997, p. 332) describes
an idealistic understanding of the ISS as an essentialist misunderstanding which does not
understand that we already always have to adopt such idealising assumptions. Following
Habermas, we have to assume, often counterfactually, that the other is not manipulating us,
that the other raises claims which are true, right and truthful. And even if such experiences
are, as Habermas (1982, p. 235) himself suggests, like islands in the sea of practice, claims
of truth, rightness and truthfulness are necessary, reciprocally anticipated conditions of social
life, an inevitable fiction (1971, p. 102). To that extent, the ISS captures what validity
claims already imply. The necessary implicitness of these validity claims in speech acts is a
condition we are not able to reject. And although communication is obviously not always
driven by communicative action, a social fabric not based on such counterfactual assumptions
would ultimately collapse.
Therein rests Habermass foundation for social transformation. Formal pragmatics illustrates
that we interact on the basis of a weak idealisation, that inclusive and egalitarian interaction is
immanent in our social practice. Emancipatory critique is thus grounded in the species intersubjective condition. Consequently, Habermas (1983a, p. 92) argues for institutional measures
which sufficiently neutralise empirical limitations and avoidable internal and external interference so that the idealised conditions pragmatically presupposed by participants in argumentation
can at least be adequately approximated. This also justifies Habermass (1996, p. 299) broader
claim for deliberative democracy which reckons with the higher-level intersubjectivity of processes of reaching understanding that take place through democratic procedures or in the communicative network of public spheres. Deliberative democracy is thus to be understood as the
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further development of formal pragmatics on the macro-political level, aiming for more inclusive and egalitarian (political) institutions and social structure.
Although this weak idealisation is often betrayed, it points to potentials for immanent transcendence. And although settings which partly realise this immanent transcendence, e.g. deliberative democracy, do not lead to a utopia, they certainly favour self-determination and social
recognition. Emancipatory critique can and should therefore support such more inclusive and
egalitarian social structures.
Splitting learning processes into cognitive theoretical learning processes and moral practical
learning processes has consequences for the specification of critique: the former aim at improving our instrumental capacity in order to manipulate the objective world, e.g. through the invention of new technologies. They have to be balanced by the latter which are based on
communicative action in order to enable successful social integration. According to Habermas
(1987, p. 142ff), an instrumentally biased rationalisation leads to deformations of the lifeworld
and hampers what communicative action should achieve: the reproduction of shared meaning.
Drawing on Freudian thinking in general and Alfred Lorenzer (1975) in particular, Habermas
describes such conditions as pathological, as the unrestricted exchange of arguments is (unconsciously) hampered. For example, the colonisation of the lifeworld works against the free development of a strong Ego through pressure generated by capitalism on families (Habermas, 1987,
pp. 318, 386ff). In the case of the individual, pathologies might lead to distortions of the structure
of communication itself due to, e.g. repression (Habermas, 1974a, p. 169, 1984, p. 21). On a collective level, societal orders might experience legitimation-crises to various degrees. Thus,
Habermas (1987, p. 378) states: deception and self-deception can gain objective power in an
everyday practice on the facticity of validity claims. However, while the rationalisation of
the lifeworld can create new pathologies, it can also enable opportunities for our well-being
(Habermas, 1987, p. 313f). As society is the product of struggles, the direction rationalisation
can take is open. Empirical critical social sciences aim to influence these struggles by illuminating emancipatory directions. I now turn to the DHA as one of its representatives.
Reviewing Habermass work illustrates that he perceives discourse as still being a form of
action, language-in-use (although a very specific form of action, different from the general
understanding of discourse in CDA and the DHA), involving validity claims to be raised
and/or rejected. Beyond this, Habermasian discourse implies a change in perspective, so that
these claims become questioned and virtualised. It operates on often counterfactual assumptions
of the ISS which is not to be understood as a utopian ideal but a presupposition that we have to
anticipate. Rationality, for Habermas, thus has a dialogical foundation, going beyond a
monological notion of rationality in terms of self-reflection. In sum, both the DHA and Habermas conceive language as a medium of domination and social force. However, as Habermas
(1974c, p. 17) indicates, such distorted communication is not ultimate; it has its basis in the
logic of undistorted language communication. Emphasising this counterfactual double role of
language (or rather of semiotic forms as they too have a propositional content), that is, the possibility of undamaged intersubjectivity, of emancipation built into every meaningful communication, seems crucial to me. Not because this conceptualisation is not already inherent in the
writings of the DHA, but because only through its explicit elaboration does this grounding
become transparent.
Empirical research inspired by the DHA has addressed issues like anti-Semitism and racism,
gender and institutions. The latter, e.g. interaction in courts (Leodolter, 1975), doctor patient
communication, school committees and therapy sessions (Wodak, 1996, pp. 35 62, 63 99,
131 169), or the European Union (Wodak & Weiss, 2005), can also benefit from a Habermasian
justification of critique. Although the object of research might sometimes suggest that an
emancipatory vocabulary is not in place, research into, for example, the European Union
need in no way be less emancipatory than research into, for example, issues of right-wing
propaganda. Quite the contrary, institutions are able to neutralise or enforce constraints of
arguments. An emancipatory critique of them is thus not only necessary but requires a justification as well.
What can link this theoretical level of justification with the DHAs key interest in the detailed
analysis of language-in-use is the concept of validity claims. This started recently by including
the concept of validity claims in the DHAs empirical analysis and is a way to further enrich the
DHA. As outlined above, the idea of the ISS as a hypostatised ideal cannot serve as a point of
departure and Habermas himself has rejected such an essentialist misunderstanding. A better
way is indeed to draw on the concept of validity claims. That is, speakers perceive their arguments as being true, right or truthful while hearers have other beliefs and must be convinced
(with better arguments) by the first person. Here, it is the interaction between the first and
second person, and their claims and justifications, which generates an always fallible dynamic
towards truth, rightness and truthfulness (Habermas, 2003, p. 45).
A Habermasian approach concentrates on exactly this dynamic, thus, on procedures which
enable the exchange of arguments to be as inclusive and egalitarian as possible. Applying the
concept of validity claims in an analysis of texts cannot therefore simply focus on the content
of raised claims. Instead, analyses which include the concept of validity claims have to focus
on the form of arguments, in particular the form of their justification. That is: does the text
enable an undistorted exploration of differences; does it allow an open and critical discussion?
Or does it serve the construction of boundaries which lead to closed worldviews? I suggest
understanding a texts clarity and accessibility as an alternative way to make sense of validity
claims in written texts (this is particularly relevant in the evaluation of the authors truthfulness
which is otherwise impossible as readers of written texts generally have no access to gestures or
the mimic of the author). This might, for example, lead to a criticism of the heavy use of metaphors which tend to create extremely coherent and suggestive text-structures, thereby counteracting a transparent exchange of arguments. In consequence, it becomes much harder for the
10
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audience to reflect on arguments given in the text and to raise critical questions. To that extent,
such texts are tendentially non-rational while rational, as defined above, is the raising of validity
claims which can be critically questioned in an open, inclusive way.
As the DHA is particularly interested in the historical context of text-production and thus
takes the longue duree into account, the concepts of successful and failed learning processes,
i.e. social change as normatively directed, provide a further, yet ignored, resource. By
looking at discourses concerning one topic over a long period, the ways in which forms of
arguing change and become more open or closed can reveal developmental tendencies. Similarly, do institutions and societal structures become more or less inclusive and egalitarian? Is
a particular historical period or place characterised by higher degrees of systematically distorted
communication, e.g. through the colonisation of the lifeworld? Hence, discourse analysis
becomes a necessary, even inevitable tool to analyse the evolution of society and criticise distorted communication.
As outlined, the DHAs toolkit can undoubtedly contribute to an understanding of how discrimination and inequality are linguistically/semiotically realised. However, I cannot see how
the DHA itself should be able to define the dividing line between manipulative procedures
(what is distorted communication) and emancipatory ones (what is undistorted communication).
In Discourse and Discrimination, Reisigl and Wodak (2001) claim that van Eemeren and Grootendorsts rules of discussion would ground the DHAs discourse ethics (see above). This would
ultimately mean that critical rationalism forms the basic theoretical point of reference for the
DHA. While van Eemeren and Grootendorsts pragma-dialectical theory (e.g. 2004, p. 16f)
has always referred to Karl Popper and Hans Alberts critical rationalism as its theoretical
point of departure, this has never been the case for the DHA. Pragma-dialectics might contribute
to an analysis by describing fallacious forms of argumentation which hamper a free debate, the
how of manipulation. However, it seems impossible, in my view, for any approach based on
critical rationalism to ground an emancipatory position on which a critical discourse analysis
relies when identifying their object of criticism, as well as the conditions it strives for.
However, it is, for example, Habermass language-philosophy which gives an account of why
fallacious arguments are fallacious at all and should therefore be criticised in order to reach
more inclusive and egalitarian conditions (for a detailed discussion of this argument, see
Forchtner & Tominc, under review).
I now relate the previous findings to the DHAs three-dimensional model of critique:
.
11
Concluding remarks
Departing from van Dijks acknowledgement of a lack of theoretical justification of CDAs critical stance, I have outlined the DHAs continuous reference to the Frankfurt School whose evolution of thought provides resources to address his objection. I have claimed that the DHA should
discuss and relate to this tradition explicitly and in even greater detail in order to ground its critique of unjustified discrimination and inequality theoretically, its moral position. In other
words: I have clarified why the object of criticism should actually be rejected which might
seem self-evident within a given community but not necessarily outside it by providing a
theoretical basis for the DHAs emancipatory stance. In contrast to Horkheimer and Adorno,
Habermas provides such a foundation which is able to validate its own critical standards by
reconstructing unavoidable, pragmatic presuppositions of interaction. Because Habermas is
able to show that living together demands an often counterintuitive idealisation of interaction,
we can rationally, i.e. not only in terms of subjective preferences, ground the move from is
to ought. Critique which strengthens universal and egalitarian aspects and enables rather
unrestricted debate, e.g. through reforming institutions accordingly, is thus theoretically justified. No doubt, there are more theories which aim for emancipation but formulate alternative
foundations (and have not been addressed here due to the particular aim of this article).
However, the DHAs consistent reference to Habermass programme makes it well suited to critique discourses in increasingly pluralist societies while anticipating
the claim to reason announced in the teleological and intersubjective structure of social reproduction
themselves . . . [which again and again] is silenced; and yet in fantasies and deeds it develops a stubbornly transcending power, because it is renewed with each act of unconstrained understanding, with
each moment of living together in solidarity, of successful individuation, and of saving emancipation. (Habermas, 1982, p. 221)
Acknowledgements
This article is based on a presentation given to the Language, Ideology and Power (LIP) research
group at Lancaster University. I am particularly thankful to Ruth Wodak for her comments on an
earlier version of this article. All mistakes remain of course my own. The author is a recipient of
a DOC-fellowship from the Austrian Academy of Sciences and an ESRC studentship at the
Department of Linguistics and English Language at Lancaster University.
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B. Forchtner
Notes on contributor
Bernhard Forchtner is a doctoral student at the Department for Linguistics and English Language at
Lancaster University, UK. In his PhD, he is analysing the discursive construction of public apologies
and their instrumentalisation. He is furthermore interested in how critical discourse analysts justify and
understand critique and particularly focuses on Jurgen Habermass language-philosophy and the potential
functions of the Pragma-Dialectical theory of argumentation for the discourse historical approach in
critical discourse analysis.
Notes
1. The Frankfurt School denotes a heterogeneous tradition of neo-Marxist thought more or less connected
with the Institute for Social Research (Frankfurt, Germany), which originated during the 1920s and early
1930s. Within this tradition, many strands have emerged, among others, Horkheimer and Adornos
primal history of the species, Jurgen Habermass language-philosophy and Axel Honneths recognition
paradigm. Despite profound differences, its strands are bound together by the conviction that (a) society
can be structured in a reasonable way, that this is (b) currently not the case, and that (c) societal transformation rests on reason already immanent in social praxis. For a comprehensive account of its history,
strands and ideas, see Wiggershaus (1995).
2. Although it might seem strange not to refer to Marx in this context (given the influence of his critical
method in general, as well as on the Frankfurt School), I do so as the DHA rarely even mentions his
name (cf. also Wodak & Meyer, 2009, p. 20). For an evaluation of Marxs method and its relevance
for (the dialecticalrelational approach to) CDA, see Fairclough and Graham (2002).
3. On the related issue of claims made by poststructuralist theory, e.g. Foucaults radical anti-naturalism
and the concept of performative contradiction, see Habermas, 1990.
4. Following Jean Piagets late theory of cognitive development (1970), Habermas (1975, p. 162) initially
perceived individual learning processes as running ahead of social learning, as pacemakers of social
evolution. Since then, Habermas (1995, see also Strydom, 1992) has altered his focus, emphasising
intersubjectivity as the medium of development and learning.
5. For example, a comprehensive analysis of cultural phenomena, such as the recent analysis of the fictionalisation of politics in American soaps (Wodak, 2009, pp. 156186) might benefit from observations
made in The dialectic of enlightenment and similar works by Herbert Marcuse (e.g. 1991) on the cultural
industry. These observations on the infantilisation of the political and/or aesthetical through its mixing
with (commercial) entertainment (and vice versa) are rich enough to inspire research. However, a discussion of this goes beyond the scope of this article and it remains to be seen if such research is pursued
further within the frame of the DHA.
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