Descrição
This research proposes a scientific investigation about the polarized discursive
constructions around the dismissal of Dilma Rousseff from the Presidency of the Republic
of Brazil, in 2016, marked by the terms Coup and Impeachment. Critical Discourse
Analysis through Norman Fairclough's Three-Dimensional Model was used as theoretical
and methodological framework. From the question of how these conflicting discursive
constructions interfered in the modus operandi of Brazilian democracy, the objective was
to analyze these discursive constructions in and by the media, characterizing them as
social and discursive practices. This analysis sought to identify, through the concepts of
Hegemony and Ideology, the intentionalities of the social actors that produce these
discourses. The study also seeks to relate aspects of Dilma's dismissal with the
institutional crisis of the Brazilian state. The research has as corpus a qualitative sample
of 14 texts published by magazines, newspapers, portals and blogs over the years 2015
and 2016, a time interval in which the discursive dispute over the meaning of the dismissal
process took place. Categories of said Three-Dimensional Model are applied. The
conclusion points to such a social-discursive practice as a maneuver to reestablish known
power relations by making dominant social groups effective as leaders.