Discours Apr 2026

Developed by thinkers like Jacques Derrida and Foucault, this view argues that discourse is fluid, unstable, and always tied to shifting historical and cultural contexts.

Analyzes how politicians use rhetoric and specific framing to influence public opinion and legitimize their actions. 4. Structuralist vs. Post-Structuralist Perspectives Discours

Investigates how discourse is used to enact, reproduce, or resist social power abuse, dominance, and inequality. Developed by thinkers like Jacques Derrida and Foucault,

Discourse creates "truths." For example, the discourse of medicine or law establishes certain ways of talking about the body or justice that become accepted as objective reality. Structuralist vs

Below is an overview of its development and key conceptual applications: 1. Linguistic Definition

Viewed discourse as a set of stable rules (like grammar) that dictate how meaning is made.

The most influential modern development of the term comes from French philosopher Michel Foucault. For Foucault, discourse is not just language; it is a system of representation that governs what can be said and who can say it.