On the question of speech portraits of political propagandists
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Based on the analysis of the oral public speech of popular publicists (S. A. Mikheev and
I. N. Panarin) working in electronic media and the Internet, the article attempts to characterize
the stylistic and semantic originality of modern Russian pro-government propaganda.
The dependence of the nature of the linguistic features of propaganda on such factors as the
personality of the propagandist, the scope of his activities, and the nature of the transmission
is established. It is shown that the personal qualities of Mikheev is conditioned by such features
of his speech as emotionality, exceeding the permissible volume level, and careless pronunciation
style, while Professor Panarin is characterized by an academic manner of speech
with its inherent consideration of the opposite point of view, argumentation, and respect for
the audience. It is claimed that the influence of the sphere of activity (Mikheev works in electronic
media, such as Evening with Vladimir Solovyov, the radio program Iron Logic, Panarin
conducts an analytical program Igor Panarin. World Politics on the YouTube channel) is found
in taking into account the composition and request of the audience to which the propaganda
is directed. Television discussion allows rudeness, verbal aggression, reduced vocabulary, political
banter, logic of the absurd, direct insults, and threats to opponents. Analytical transmission
involves the strategic forecasting of events filled with the metaphysics of propaganda, the
creation of mythologies, the use of allegories, and hints. It is proved that despite the almost
opposite stylistic format, the propaganda discourse of Mikheev and Panarina is characterized
by common dominant semantic categories, such as traditional family values, religiosity, conservatism,
protection of the interests of the state, humanistic maximalism, and the historical
continuity of Russia.
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Milekhina, T. A. (2021). On the question of speech portraits of political propagandists. Media Linguistics, 8 (3), 237–247.