DISCURSIVELY CONSTITUTING DEMOCRATIC POWER: A SOCIO-COGNITIVE CRITICAL DISCOURSE ANALYSIS OF ZOHRAN MAMDANI’S VICTORY SPEECH

Authors

  • Sajad Ali MS Scholar, Department of Social Sciences, University of the West of Scotland, London Author
  • Maryam Javed Lecturer, Department of English, Federal Urdu University of Arts, Sciences & Technology, Islamabad Author
  • Hijab Aqdas MS Scholar, Department of Humanities, CUI, Islamabad Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63878/jalt1624

Abstract

This research examines how political authority, legitimacy, and collective identity are discursively constructed during moments of democratic transition by analyzing Zohran Mamdani’s victory speech following his electoral success in New York City. Rather than treating electoral victory as a procedural outcome, the research highlights the role of victory speeches in transforming electoral success into morally justified and collectively owned political power. The research aims to explore how Mamdani’s discourse reframes political authority as emerging from shared working-class experience, collective struggle, and counter-hegemonic ideology. The research adopts a qualitative approach, employing textual analysis within a Critical Discourse Analysis framework grounded in Teun A. van Dijk’s socio-cognitive theory. Mamdani’s victory speech serves as the data and is analyzed to identify ideological meanings, group representations, mental models, and argumentative strategies that legitimize political authority. The findings show that the speech constructs “the people” as a legitimate political subject through representations of embodied labor, shared hardship, and collective agency. Ideological polarization, structured through van Dijk’s Ideological Square, contrasts an inclusive working-class in-group with elite political and economic out-groups. Narrative exemplars and affective metaphors function as mental models that translate ideology into lived experience, while argumentation frames governance as an ethical necessity. The research underscores the importance of victory speeches as sites where democratic power is discursively constituted and normalized. By applying a socio-cognitive CDA to post-electoral discourse, the research contributes to political discourse studies and offers insights for future research on ideological legitimation and democratic participation.

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Published

2025-12-29