1st Edition

The Pragmatics of Governmental Discourse Resilience, Sustainability and Wellbeing

By Ayan-Yue Gupta Copyright 2025
    218 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book presents a novel methodological framework for analysing governmental discourse. It involves combining pragmatist perspectives on language with computational sociolinguistics and large language models (LLMs).

    The first half discusses traditional critical approaches to investigating discursive practices, principally those employing Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) and those based on methods developed by Michel Foucault. These are critiqued in terms of pragmatist views on meaning, which are rarely taken up in this area. It is argued that to understand the grounding of social structures and power relations in discourse, we must begin with a systematic account of how meaning is contextually fixed. It is proposed that a pragmatist reading of Foucault’s arguments about governmentality offers a productive framework for discourse analysis. To illustrate the advantages of this framework, the book presents a case study of the British government’s adoption of resilience, sustainability, and wellbeing discourses in the period 2000-2020. A dataset of 179 million tokens sampled from approximately 170,000 government documents is used to illustrate how this framework can be combined with natural language processing (NLP) to make robust inferences.

    This study will be of interest to both sociologists interested in language and in the methodological potential of recent developments in NLP. Importantly, the book demonstrates how LLMs can be harnessed to bring new perspectives to long-standing sociological questions.

    Introduction: Sociological Discourse Analysis, Natural Language Processing and Early 21st-Century Digitalisation

    Part 1

    1. Two Approaches to the Question of Necessity

    2. Semiosis, Scorekeeping and Text Systems

    3. Discursive Scorekeeping and Foucault

    Part 2

    4. Understanding Text Systems via Linguistic Variation

    5. Diffusion of the Vocabulary of Crisis Neoliberalism and the Division of Labour of the British State

    6. The Sociolinguistic Structure of Governmentality – Division of Labour, Division of Vocabulary, and Division of Linguistic Labour

    Conclusion: Comments on Piggyback Work and Future Directions

    Biography

    Ayan-Yue Gupta has focused on research on the analysis of language and politics using computational methods, in particular natural language processing. In 2023, he completed his PhD at the University of Bristol, upon which this book is based. His current interests include computational social science, natural language processing, government discourse, polarisation and climate communications.