Hedging and Boosting in Political Press Briefings: A Critical Discourse Analysis of U.S., U.K., and Iraqi Political Discourse with an Introduction to Cultural-Ideological Linguistic Model
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How to Cite

Ali, A. L. A. T. ., Khudhayer, A. P. M. A. ., & Jeryo, R. . (2025). Hedging and Boosting in Political Press Briefings: A Critical Discourse Analysis of U.S., U.K., and Iraqi Political Discourse with an Introduction to Cultural-Ideological Linguistic Model. Manar Elsharq Journal for Literature and Language Studies, 3(3), 9–21. https://doi.org/10.56961/mejlls.v3i3.1058

Abstract

This study develops and validates the Cultural-Ideological Linguistic Model (CILM), a framework for analyzing political discourse strategies across diverse cultural and political contexts. Combining macro-level sociopolitical factors (political systems, conflict involvement, Hofstede’s cultural dimensions) with micro-level linguistic analysis (hedging and boosting strategies), the model examines how power dynamics shape diplomatic communication and how these linguistic choices are filtered through media reception. Using a mixed-methods approach, the research compared U.S., U.K., and Iraqi political briefings, revealing distinct discourse patterns: U.S. officials employ boosting for dominance (18.7/1k words) and hedging for flexibility (12.4/1k words); Iraqi discourse favors hedging (22.1/1k words) for conflict mitigation, while U.K. communication balances both for consensus-building. The study identifies cultural-linguistic interfaces, showing that individualist cultures correlate with directness, while high power distance predicts hedging frequency. Empirical validation demonstrates how macro-context (e.g., unipolar power position) shapes micro-linguistic choices (e.g., U.S. “unequivocally” vs. Iraqi “possibly”), mediated by journalistic reception norms (media-political relationships, conflict proximity). The findings challenge universalist assumptions in political discourse analysis, highlighting culture-specific risk management in international relations. The CILM advances theoretical debates in critical discourse analysis, pragmatics, and cross-cultural communication, offering practical tools for diplomacy, media analysis, and conflict resolution.

https://doi.org/10.56961/mejlls.v3i3.1058
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Copyright (c) 2025 Asst. Lect. Ali Taha Ali, Asst. Prof. Muneer Ali Khudhayer, Raqib.Abbas Jeryo