Yang Z.

Specifics of the categories of addressor and addressee in the supertext of Russian public advertising during the coronavirus pandemic. Pp. 92–101.

UDC 811.161.1:769.91

DOI 10.37724/RSU.2024.84.3.011

 

Abstract. The article analyzes the subject-object organization of coronavirus advertising discourse. The categories of addresser and addressee are studied in the framework of the communicative situation of the COVID-19 pandemic. The study is based on a corpus of 1,500 Russian-language social advertising posters related to the coronavirus, which are considered by the author as a single supertext characterized by a coherent modal attitude and sufficiently defined positions of the addresser and addressee. The subject-object organization of the analyzed supertext is determined by the main function of social advertising in a crisis situation — intended to be effective in interaction between the state and the population. This determines the socio-psychological roles of communicators. In such cases, the collective addresser is public authorities, who run a dialog with the collective addressees in an imperative-directive tone. At the same time, the collective addressor seeks to build WE-relationships that fulfill a consolidating role. Various addressees (children, medical workers, policemen, firemen, volunteers, heroes of classical literature) are also included into the advertising supertext, so as to bring the official authorities closer to the collective addressee. The image of the addressee in the coronavirus discourse is society as a whole, for whom the main value during the pandemic is life and health as absolute basics of their existence. At the same time, we face a whole mosaic of addressee representation, differentiated by age, gender and professional divisions. The addressee is verbalized in the text by direct and contextual nominations. The categories of persons at risk, as well as those who have an active civic position and perform their professional duty in the conditions of the pandemic (doctors, volunteers, representatives of various social services) are especially emphasized.

 

Keywords: addresser, addressee, heroes of our time, coronavirus pandemic, supertext, social advertising poster, strategy for consolidating communicants.

 

Bibliography

 

  1. Bakhtin M. M. Sobraniye sochineniy: v 7 t. [Collected works: in 7 vols.]. Moscow, Rus. Slovari: Languages of Slavic cultures Publ., 2003, vol. 1: Philosophical aesthetics of the 1920s, 958 p. (In Russian).
  2. Wierzbicka A. Sopostavleniye kultur cherez posredstvo leksiki i grammatiki [Comparison of cultures through vocabulary and grammar]. Transl. from Engl. by A. D. Shmelev. Moscow, Languages of the Slavic cultures Publ., 2001, 272 p. (In Russian).
  3. Vepreva I. T. National apecifics of social advertising about coronavirus in Russia and China. Quaestio Rossica. 2022, vol. 10, iss. 1, pp. 35–52. (In Russian).
  4. Vepreva I. T., Yang Zhibing. Axiosphere of Social Advertising Posters about Coronavirus in Russia and China. Nauchnyy dialog[Scientific Dialogue]. 2023, vol. 12, iss. 2, pp. 102–123. (In Russian).
  5. VKontakte: social network. Available at: https://vk.com/ (accessed: 19.02.2024). (In Russian).
  6. Graneva I. Yu. The pronoun “we” as a means of ideological manipulation in the Russian-language picture of the world. Vestnik Nizhegorodskogo universiteta im. N. I. Lobachevskogo [Bulletin of the Nizhny Novgorod University named after N. I. Lobachevsky]. 2010, iss. 4-2, pp. 494–496. (In Russian).
  7. Kaminskaya T. L. Obraz adresata v tekstakh massovoy kommunikatsii: ucheb. posobiye [The image of the addressee in mass communication texts: study guide]. Veliky Novgorod, Novgorod State University, 2006, 49 p. (In Russian).
  8. Karadzhev B. I. The factor of the addresser and the addressee in media discourse. Vestnik Rossiyskogo universiteta druzhby narodov. Ser. “Voprosy obrazovaniya: yazyki i spetsialnost” [Bulletin of the Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia. Ser. “Issues of Education: Languages ​​and Specialty”]. 2014, iss. 3, pp. 40–46. (In Russian).
  9. Kornilova K. S., Tsarikova V. S. Advertising market during the COVID-19 pandemic. Vestnik Voronezhskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Ser. “Filologiya. Zhurnalistika” [Bulletin of the Voronezh State University. Ser. “Philology. Journalism”]. 2022, iss. 1, pp. 125–129. (In Russian).
  10. Kupina N. A., Bitenskaya G. V. Supertext and its varieties. Chelovek — tekst — kultura[Man — text — culture]. Yekaterinburg, AO Poligrafist Publ., 1994, pp. 214–233. (In Russian).
  11. Ministerstvo Rossiyskoy Federatsii po delam grazhdanskoy oborony, chrezvychaynym situatsiyam
    i likvidatsii posledstviy stikhiynykh bedstviy
    [Ministry of the Russian Federation for Civil Defense, Emergencies and Elimination of Consequences of Natural Disasters]. Available at: https://mchs.gov.ru/ (accessed: 19.02.2024). (In Russian).
  12. Nikolaishvili G. G. Sotsialnaya reklama v politicheskom protsesse sovremennoy Rossii [Social advertising in the political process of modern Russia]. Abstract of dissertation of candidate of philology: 23.00.02. Moscow, 2009, 29 p. (In Russian).
  13. Novikova O. N., Kalugina Yu. V. The color metaphor of coronavirus. Neofilologiya [Neophilology]. 2024, vol. 10, iss. 1, pp. 8–16. (In Russian).
  14. Norman B. Yu. The Russian pronoun WE: internal dramaturgy. Russian linguistics. 2002, vol. 26, iss. 2, pp. 217–234. (In Russian).
  15. Popova E. S. Reklamnyy tekst i problemy manipulyatsii [Advertising text and problems of manipulation]. Abstract of dissertation … of candidate of philology: 10.02.01. Yekaterinburg, 2005, 27 p. (In Russian).
  16. Sabirova D. R., Kalegina T. E. On the pandemic impact of the linguistic landscape of France (the City of Paris). Kazanskiy lingvisticheskiy zhurnal[Kazan Linguistic Journal]. 2023, vol. 6, iss. 2, pp. 187–197. (In Russian).
  17. Sinelnikova L. N. Specificity of Addresser-Addressee Relations in Mass Media Discourse. Uchenyye zapiski Tavricheskogo natsionalnogo universiteta im. V. I. Vernadskogo. Ser. “Filologiya. Sotsialnaya kommunikatsiya” [Scholasrly Notes of the Tavrida V. I. Vernadsky National University. Ser. “Philology. Social Communication”]. 2008, vol. 21 (60), iss. 1, pp. 140–153. (In Russian).
  18. Solganik G. Ya. Osnovy lingvistiki rechi: ucheb. posobiye [Fundamentals of speech linguistics: a textbook]. Moscow, Moscow University Press Publ., 2010, 128 p. (In Russian).
  19. Steksova T. I. The tendency to dialogize a monologue text on the pages of the modern media. Russkiy yazyk: istoricheskiye sudby i sovremennost: II Mezhdunar. kongress issledovateley russkogo yazyka: tr. i materialy [Russian language: historical destinies and modernity: II International Congress of Russian Language Researchers: works and materials]. Moscow, Moscow State University Publ., 2004, pp. 441–442. (In Russian).
  20. Obyasnyaem.rf. Available at: obyasnyaem.rf/stopkoronavirus/ (accessed: 19.02.2024). (In Russian).
  21. Terskikh M. V. Polycode tools of influence in anti-COVID social advertising (advertising campaigns in Russia and Turkey). Neofilologiya [Neophilology]. 2023a, vol. 9, iss. 3, pp. 698–712. (In Russian).
  22. Terskikh M. V. Newsjacking technology in advertising: the discursive dominant of “COVID-19”. Kommunikativnyye issledovaniya[Communicative studies]. 2023b, vol. 10, iss. 1, pp. 112–125. (In Russian).
  23. Tolkovyy slovar russkogo yazyka s vklyucheniyem svedeniy o proiskhozhdenii slov. [Explanatory dictionary of the Russian language with the inclusion of information on the origin of words]. Ed. by N. Yu. Shvedova. Moscow, Azbukovnik Publ., 2008, 1175 p. (In Russian).
  24. Federalnaya sluzhba po nadzoru v sfere zashchity prav potrebiteley i blagopoluchiya cheloveka [Federal Service for Supervision of Consumer Rights Protection and Human Wellbeing]. Available at: https://www.rospotrebnadzor.ru/ (accessed: 19.02.2024). (In Russian).
  25. Formanovskaya N. I. Rechevoye vzaimodeystviye: kommunikatsiya i pragmatika [Speech interaction: communication and pragmatics]. Moscow, IKAR Publ., 2007, 480 p. (In Russian).
  26. Available at: ya.ru (accessed: 19.02.2024). (In Russian).
  27. #MYVMESTE. Available at: myvmeste.rf (accessed: 19.02.2024). (In Russian).
  28. Available at: google.ru (accessed: 19.02.2024). (In Russian).
Uncategorized