DISCOURSE, IDENTITY, AND CROWD REPRESENTATION: A LINGUISTIC ANALYSIS OF THE LAHORE BLASPHEMY INCIDENT

Authors

  • Irzam Shahzad PhD (Scholar) English Literature, Department of English Language and Literature, The University of Faisalabad Author
  • Dr. Katsiaryna Hurbik Professor, PhD Linguistics (Theory of Language), Department of English Language and Literature, The University of Faisalabad Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63878/jalt1691

Keywords:

crowd representation, social identity, blasphemy incident, critical discourse analysis.

Abstract

This study aims to explore how cultural, religious and social factors contribute to crowd violence, particularly during the Lahore blasphemy event that occurred on February 23rd, 2024 using a Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) to analyze the language, narratives, and pattern of public representation of the incident. The study also unveils how media coverage and the FIR, as well as witnesses’ views, construct discursive processes in which the crowd behavior is narratively justified. Crowd Psychology by Gustave Le Bon and the Social Identity Theory by Tajfel are applied as the interpretive models to provide the discursive construction of anonymity, contagion, suggestibility and social identity in the context of media narratives and eyewitness interviews. This work contributes to the academic discussion on literary works as it shows how the concept of crowd violence can be mediated by discourses and manifest itself as a result of interpretive systems, symbolic associations, and narrative conventions that define cultural perception.

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Published

2025-12-29