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<title>CONTEXT, MULTIMODALITY AND PERSUASION IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN ADVERTISEMENTS IN SELECTED NIGERIAN NEWSPAPERS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1918</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-15T03:47:32Z</dc:date>
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<title>CONTEXT, MULTIMODALITY AND PERSUASION IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN ADVERTISEMENTS IN SELECTED NIGERIAN NEWSPAPERS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1919</link>
<description>CONTEXT, MULTIMODALITY AND PERSUASION IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN ADVERTISEMENTS IN SELECTED NIGERIAN NEWSPAPERS
ODUNSI, Oluyemi Adetola
Presidential election campaign advertisements in Nigerian newspapers deploy multimodal&#13;
and persuasive discourse strategies, which are contextually predetermined to influence&#13;
voters’ decisions before an election. Existing linguistic studies on presidential election&#13;
campaign advertisements in Nigerian newspapers focused mainly on persuasive effects from&#13;
stylistic, metaphoric and satirical perspectives. However, little attention was paid to context&#13;
and multimodal resources used in creating the effects. This study was, therefore, designed&#13;
to investigate contextual representations in election campaign advertisements in selected&#13;
Nigerian newspapers. This was to determine context types, discourse issues, multimodal&#13;
resources and persuasive structures in the advertisements.&#13;
Gunther Kress and Theo van Leeuwen's Multimodality Theory, complemented by Richard&#13;
Petty and John Cacioppo’s Elaboration Likelihood Model, served as the framework. The&#13;
descriptive design was adopted. Presidential election campaign advertisements of the two&#13;
major and most popular political parties in Nigeria, All Progressives Congress (APC) and&#13;
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) were purposively selected. The advertisements published&#13;
in 2015 and 2019 were purposively selected based on the transitional uniqueness of the&#13;
period. Quota sampling was used to select two newspapers from the Lagos/Ibadan axis&#13;
(Punch and Nigerian Tribune (NT)) and one from the Kaduna/Abuja axis (Daily Trust (DT)).&#13;
Quota sampling was also used to select 40 advertisements from the newspapers (10 from&#13;
DT, and 15 each from NT and Punch). The data were subjected to multimodal discourse&#13;
analysis.&#13;
Three projected context types were identified: context of victory (CV), context of defeat&#13;
(CD) and context of countering opponent’s strategies (CCOS). Context of victory involved&#13;
use of peripheral route of persuasion (PRP), which was characterised by low elaboration,&#13;
credibility issues, positive self-presentation, emotional inducements and celebrity&#13;
endorsements, requiring no critical thinking for readers’ comprehension (DT). Context of&#13;
defeat exhibited central route of persuasion (CRP) in high elaboration and logical&#13;
presentation of facts aimed at provoking critical thinking (Punch and NT), while CCOS (NT&#13;
and Punch) reflected integrated use of PRP and CRP made coherent through comparative&#13;
listing of achievements and change of slogan to reflect new realities. Seven discourse issues&#13;
were identified: leadership attributes (DT, NT and Punch), unemployment, insecurity,&#13;
poverty reduction (NT and Punch), economic problems, education and infrastructures&#13;
(Punch, DT and NT). In 2015, APC, as challenger, deployed more of CV and PRP, but as&#13;
incumbent in 2019, it used more of CD and CRP (Punch and NT). Conversely, PDP, as&#13;
incumbent in 2015, utilised CD and CRP, and as challenger in 2019, deployed CV and PRP&#13;
(Punch and NT). Eight multimodal resources were identified: written words, pictures,&#13;
drawings, typography, slogans, colours, statistical elements and logos (DT, NT and Punch).&#13;
Four persuasive structures were identified: request and explication, problem and solution,&#13;
question and answer, and quotation and question (Punch, DT and NT). These were used to&#13;
indicate information value, salience and coherence in the advertisements and to justify the&#13;
political parties’ stances on various discourse issues before the elections.&#13;
Presidential campaign advertisements in Nigerian newspapers deploy context-determined&#13;
persuasive designs meant to consolidate envisaged support, prevent likely defeat and&#13;
anticipatorily counter opponent’s strategies before an election.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-07-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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