<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<dcite:resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:dcite="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4.7/metadata.xsd">
  <dcite:identifier identifierType="DOI">10.17192/obst.2025.105.8940</dcite:identifier>
  <dcite:creators>
    <dcite:creator>
      <dcite:creatorName nameType="Personal">Bock, Bettina M.</dcite:creatorName>
      <dcite:givenName>Bettina M.</dcite:givenName>
      <dcite:familyName>Bock</dcite:familyName>
      <dcite:nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID" schemeURI="https://orcid.org">0000-0002-4796-4320</dcite:nameIdentifier>
    </dcite:creator>
  </dcite:creators>
  <dcite:titles>
    <dcite:title xml:lang="de">Was (nicht) gesagt werden muss.</dcite:title>
    <dcite:title titleType="AlternativeTitle">Umkehr diskursiver Machtverhältnisse und alternativer Common Sense in ableismuskritischen Diskursräumen</dcite:title>
    <dcite:title>Osnabrücker Beiträge zur Sprachtheorie : Vol 105 (2025)</dcite:title>
  </dcite:titles>
  <dcite:publisher>Philipps-Universität Marburg</dcite:publisher>
  <dcite:publicationYear>2025</dcite:publicationYear>
  <dcite:subjects>
    <dcite:subject>Ableismus, Behinderung, Common Sense, Diskriminierung, Social-Media-Diskurs, Implizitheit, Nichtgesagtes, hegemonialer Diskurs, Macht, Öffentlichkeit </dcite:subject>
    <dcite:subject>ableism, disability, common sense, discrimination, social media discourse, im-plicitness, the unsaid, hegemonic discourse, power, public sphere</dcite:subject>
  </dcite:subjects>
  <dcite:contributors/>
  <dcite:dates>
    <dcite:date dateType="Updated">2025-11-25</dcite:date>
    <dcite:date dateType="Issued">2025-11-25</dcite:date>
  </dcite:dates>
  <dcite:language>de</dcite:language>
  <dcite:resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">JournalArticle</dcite:resourceType>
  <dcite:alternateIdentifiers>
    <dcite:alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="URL">https://journals.uni-marburg.de/0007/2025/345/8940</dcite:alternateIdentifier>
    <dcite:alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="URN">urn:nbn:de:hebis:04-0007-2025-345-89405</dcite:alternateIdentifier>
  </dcite:alternateIdentifiers>
  <dcite:relatedIdentifiers>
    <dcite:relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="DOI" relationType="IsPartOf">https://doi.org/10.17192/obst.2025.105</dcite:relatedIdentifier>
    <dcite:relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="URL" resourceTypeGeneral="Image" relationType="IsDescribedBy">https://journals.uni-marburg.de/0007/2025/345/8940/8940.png</dcite:relatedIdentifier>
    <dcite:relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="ISSN" relationType="IsPartOf">0936-0271</dcite:relatedIdentifier>
  </dcite:relatedIdentifiers>
  <dcite:formats>
    <dcite:format>application/pdf</dcite:format>
  </dcite:formats>
  <dcite:rightsList>
    <dcite:rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0">https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0</dcite:rights>
  </dcite:rightsList>
  <dcite:descriptions>
    <dcite:description descriptionType="Abstract">Der Beitrag widmet sich einem in der Linguistik bislang wenig betrachteten Feld diskriminierender Sprachhandlungen: Ableismus (‚Behindertenfeindlichkeit‘). Am Beispiel des Diskurses um angemessene Personenbezeichnungen für Menschen mit Behinderung wird rekonstruiert, wie unterschiedliches Wissen – unterschiedliche Common Senses – die klassischen (massenmedialen) Elitediskurse einerseits und marginalisierte (behindertenaktivistische) Diskurse in den Sozialen Medien andererseits prägen. Ein Fokus der Analyse liegt darauf, was in den beiden ‚Diskursräumen‘ jeweils nicht gesagt werden muss. Dabei zeigt sich, dass der untersuchte marginalisierte Diskurs sprachlich-rhetorische Verfahren dominanter Diskurse nutzt und damit lokal Machtverhältnisse umkehrt.
This article is dedicated to a field of discriminatory speech acts that has so far received little attention in linguistics: ableism. Using the example of the discourse on appropriate personal designations for people with disabilities, it reconstructs how different knowledge – different common senses – shape the classic (mass media) elite discourses on the one hand and marginalised (disability activist) discourses in social media on the other. One focus of the analysis is on what does not need to be said in each of the two ‘discourse arenas’. It shows that the marginalised discourse uses linguistic and rhetorical procedures of dominant discourses and thus reverses power relations locally.</dcite:description>
  </dcite:descriptions>
  <dcite:relatedItems>
    <dcite:relatedItem relationType="IsPublishedIn" relatedItemType="Journal">
      <dcite:relatedItemIdentifier relatedItemIdentifierType="ISSN">0936-0271</dcite:relatedItemIdentifier>
      <dcite:titles>
        <dcite:title>Osnabrücker Beiträge zur Sprachtheorie</dcite:title>
      </dcite:titles>
      <dcite:issue>Vol 105 (2025)</dcite:issue>
    </dcite:relatedItem>
  </dcite:relatedItems>
</dcite:resource>
