The Rhetorics of Political Graffiti on A Divisive Wall

abstract: This study contributes to the literature of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by offering rhetorical and discourse analysis of political graffiti on a wall built by Israel in Palestine. The analysis attempts to answer the urgent questions of why, who, when, how and for whom these graffiti e...

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Other Authors: Dahdal, Sylvia Hanna (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44243
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-442432018-06-22T03:08:30Z The Rhetorics of Political Graffiti on A Divisive Wall abstract: This study contributes to the literature of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by offering rhetorical and discourse analysis of political graffiti on a wall built by Israel in Palestine. The analysis attempts to answer the urgent questions of why, who, when, how and for whom these graffiti exist. The data collected for the analysis consists of personal photos of graffiti taken randomly in 2010 and 2013 in Bethlehem, on the Palestinian side of the massive wall. Several theories in rhetoric and discourse analysis were consulted to perform the technical rhetorical and linguistic analyses of the graffiti utterances, images, and messages in selected photos of the graffiti. Social, physical, psychological and political factors that affect communication between the wall graffitists and their readers is discussed to assist in the interpretation of the messages of these graffiti from a Palestinian perspective. The findings of this qualitative study show that graffiti on such a high profile site are not typical of violent gang graffiti as commonly interpreted in the US, but rather contribute a universal interactive rhetorical mode employed by local and international graffitists to show their solidarity and demands for basic human rights for a misrepresented culture. Moreover, the wall graffiti function as evidence that graffiti has evolved into a formal performing art that can be found in respected art galleries. The wall graffiti create a dialogue between uncoordinated actors who come from different orientations to produce an array of positions not usually present in corporate media outlets. The analysis of the wall shows that these graffiti promote deep cultural and historical understanding, as well as break down boundaries and stereotypes. The collective threefold result of the analysis is the following: First, graffiti on the wall have a collective universal motive; second, the graffiti give voice to the voiceless; and third, the graffiti can prompt a sociopolitical change that can lead to a long overdue peaceful resolution to the conflict. Keywords: Political rhetoric, discourse analysis, Burke, Halliday, Banksy, political graffiti, street art, Arab graffiti, rhetorical and linguistic patterns, dramatistic, identification, universality, Palestine divisive wall, intertextuality Dissertation/Thesis Dahdal, Sylvia Hanna (Author) Adams, Karen L (Advisor) Gelderen, Elly van (Committee member) Miller, Keith D (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Rhetoric Sociolinguistics Linguistics Banksy Discourse Analysis Divisive Wall Linguistic Patterns Palestine Graffiti Political Rhetoric eng 142 pages Doctoral Dissertation English 2017 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44243 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2017
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Rhetoric
Sociolinguistics
Linguistics
Banksy
Discourse Analysis
Divisive Wall
Linguistic Patterns
Palestine Graffiti
Political Rhetoric
spellingShingle Rhetoric
Sociolinguistics
Linguistics
Banksy
Discourse Analysis
Divisive Wall
Linguistic Patterns
Palestine Graffiti
Political Rhetoric
The Rhetorics of Political Graffiti on A Divisive Wall
description abstract: This study contributes to the literature of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by offering rhetorical and discourse analysis of political graffiti on a wall built by Israel in Palestine. The analysis attempts to answer the urgent questions of why, who, when, how and for whom these graffiti exist. The data collected for the analysis consists of personal photos of graffiti taken randomly in 2010 and 2013 in Bethlehem, on the Palestinian side of the massive wall. Several theories in rhetoric and discourse analysis were consulted to perform the technical rhetorical and linguistic analyses of the graffiti utterances, images, and messages in selected photos of the graffiti. Social, physical, psychological and political factors that affect communication between the wall graffitists and their readers is discussed to assist in the interpretation of the messages of these graffiti from a Palestinian perspective. The findings of this qualitative study show that graffiti on such a high profile site are not typical of violent gang graffiti as commonly interpreted in the US, but rather contribute a universal interactive rhetorical mode employed by local and international graffitists to show their solidarity and demands for basic human rights for a misrepresented culture. Moreover, the wall graffiti function as evidence that graffiti has evolved into a formal performing art that can be found in respected art galleries. The wall graffiti create a dialogue between uncoordinated actors who come from different orientations to produce an array of positions not usually present in corporate media outlets. The analysis of the wall shows that these graffiti promote deep cultural and historical understanding, as well as break down boundaries and stereotypes. The collective threefold result of the analysis is the following: First, graffiti on the wall have a collective universal motive; second, the graffiti give voice to the voiceless; and third, the graffiti can prompt a sociopolitical change that can lead to a long overdue peaceful resolution to the conflict. Keywords: Political rhetoric, discourse analysis, Burke, Halliday, Banksy, political graffiti, street art, Arab graffiti, rhetorical and linguistic patterns, dramatistic, identification, universality, Palestine divisive wall, intertextuality === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation English 2017
author2 Dahdal, Sylvia Hanna (Author)
author_facet Dahdal, Sylvia Hanna (Author)
title The Rhetorics of Political Graffiti on A Divisive Wall
title_short The Rhetorics of Political Graffiti on A Divisive Wall
title_full The Rhetorics of Political Graffiti on A Divisive Wall
title_fullStr The Rhetorics of Political Graffiti on A Divisive Wall
title_full_unstemmed The Rhetorics of Political Graffiti on A Divisive Wall
title_sort rhetorics of political graffiti on a divisive wall
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44243
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