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Robert Klemmensen, black and white photo.

Robert Klemmensen

Assistant Head of Department | Professor

Robert Klemmensen, black and white photo.

Lexical Ambiguity in Political Rhetoric: Why Morality Doesn't Fit in a Bag of Words

Author

  • Patrick W Kraft
  • Robert Klemmensen

Summary, in English

How do politicians use moral appeals in their rhetoric? Previous research suggests that morality plays an important role in elite communication and that the endorsement of specific values varies systematically across the ideological spectrum. We argue that this view is incomplete since it only focuses on whether certain values are endorsed and not how they are contextualized by politicians. Using a novel sentence embedding approach, we show that although liberal and conservative politicians use the same moral terms, they attach diverging meanings to these values. Accordingly, the politics of morality is not about the promotion of specific moral values per se but, rather, a competition over their respective meaning. Our results highlight that simple dictionary-based methods to measure moral rhetoric may be insufficient since they fail to account for the semantic contexts in which words are used and, therefore, risk overlooking important features of political communication and party competition.

Department/s

  • Department of Political Science
  • LU Profile Area: Natural and Artificial Cognition

Publishing year

2024

Language

English

Pages

201-219

Publication/Series

British Journal of Political Science

Volume

54

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Topic

  • Political Science

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0007-1234