On the road to the presidency: A pragma-rhetorical analysis of the campaign speeches of John Agyekum Kufuor
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University of Cape Coast
Abstract
The thesis explored and compared the deployment ofrhetorical and pragmatic strategies
in the campaign discourse of President John Agyekum Kufuor (JAK) as a challenger
and as an incumbent respectively in Ghana’s 2000 and 2004 presidential elections. Nine
of his campaign speeches were selected for the study, using largely qualitative research
design supported by the Pragma-Rhetorical Theory (Hie, 2006) and Functional Theory
ofPolitical Campaign Discourse (Benoit, 1999). The rhetorical analysis revealed that
as a challenger JAK employed negative campaigning rooted in bellicose rhetoric. He
also resorted to can-do optimism and marketed himself as an agent of change and the
quintessence of the cure-all for Ghana’s problems. Conversely, as an incumbent the
study showed that JAK appealed for continuity using temperate rhetoric. He flaunted
his achievements and appropriated the ethos oftraditional rulers to create a viable image
of himself as a performing president. The pragmatic analysis, based on Searle’s (1979)
classification of speech acts showed a preponderance of assertives. However, as a
challenger, JAK performed more assertive acts (52.8%) than as an incumbent (47.2%).
more informative and descriptive in terms of the socio-economic conditions in the country.
These findings underscore JAK’s adroitness in the tactical selection ofvaried rhetorical
and pragmatic strategies to reflect his challenger-incumbent status for the achievement
of his persuasive and communicative intentions. The findings of the study have
implications for challengers eager to win power and incumbents keen to maintain power
Description
xviii,90;,ill
