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Integration and progress in documents which propose the constitution of the FTAA

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Author(s):
Luciana Nogueira
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Master's Dissertation
Press: Campinas, SP.
Institution: Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP). Instituto de Estudos da Linguagem
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Eduardo Guimarães; Mónica Zoppi Fontana; Soeli Maria Schreiber da Silva
Advisor: Eduardo Guimarães
Abstract

In this master's thesis we have proceeded with a semantic study of the designation (designação, in Portuguese) of the words integration and progress from the enunciations contained in the documents which propose the constitution of the FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas). We have worked in the semantic-enunciative perspective that takes the relationship amongst language, history and subject for granted. This way, we could establish a relationship with the theory of the French Discourse Analysis. The concept of enunciation as an event, as well as the concept of designation, was fundamental to our analyses. The mode by which we have conducted our analyses was through the reading of the procedures of rewriting, and, furthermore, through the procedures of articulation in order to get to the semantics domains of determination (domínios semânticos de determinação, in Portuguese) of the word being put into question. We have still analysed the word integration as a nominalised enunciation, and, through this, we were able to worka bit with the issue of the memory. Knowing the senses of such words in these texts represents a mode of trying to understand what the designation of these words brings to the purpose of the public relations settled at the FTAA. From the analysis of these words, we have discussed about the relationship of enunciative litigation between the FTAA and the Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America and Caribbean (ALBA, in Spanish). This is a political litigation characterised as a confrontation and a conflict between a normativity of a statement and another one that fits it as its counterpart (AU)