THE CONCEPTION OF THE BATTLE AGAINST HIV IN SOUTH AFRICA - A Critical Discourse Analysis of Speeches by Mandela, Mbeki and Zuma
Abstract
In the past decade South Africa has enrolled the biggest antiretroviral treatment programme
(ARV) in the world to treat HIV/AIDS. The country has had a hard time to deal with the disease
for a long time, however, now seems to make progress in combatting the disease and even sets
an example for other countries in the world in how to deal with the disease. How the country
has been battling this disease and in what way this is represented in the speeches from the
former presidents of the country, is what is at the core of this paper. Messages from Mandela
(1994), Mbeki (200) and Zuma (2009, 2014) will be analysed with the help of critical discourse
analysis. The theoretical works of Van Leeuwen (2007), who focusses on legitimation and
Schröter (2018), engaging with silence and absence in discourse are the main points of
departure for the qualitative analysis that will be conducted on these texts. Resulting in
revealing how marginalisation through stigmatisation, denialist discourse and scientific
discourse have been legitimised in these speeches.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2021-10-04Author
DeBoer, Esther
Keywords
African languages
South Africa
HIV/AIDS
Mandela
Mbeki
Zuma
Critical Discourse Analysis
Legitimation Theory
Silent Discourse
Series/Report no.
SPL magisteruppsats, afrikanska språk
SPL 2021-011
Language
eng