2. Estiningsih’s  thesis  “News  Ideology  of  Suharto’s  Fall  Event  in  “After
Suharto” in
Newsweek
and “End of Era” Article in
Time
Magazine”
This undergraduate thesis discusses about the fall of Suharto event seen in two articles  from
TIME
magazine  and
NEWSWEEK
.  The  first  article  entitles  ―After Suharto‖ while the second article entitles ―End of an Era‖. This research tries to seek
the news ideologies brought in those two articles in understanding the fall of Suharto event in Indonesia, through its representation on the vocabularies choices.
Both of this present thesis and Estiningsih’s thesis analyze the lexical choice in  conveying  certain  issue.  While  this  present  thesis  analyzes  the  cohesion  of  the
lexical  items  or  vocabulary  in  conveying  the  resignation  of  South  Korea’s  Prime Minister,  Estiningsih’s  thesis  analyzes  the  lexical  choices  without  analyzing  its
cohesion in order to convey the fall of Suharto event. This is what makes this present thesis
similar with Estiningsih’s thesis; the analysis of the lexical choices. Then,  the  thing  that  makes  this  present  thesis  different  with  Estiningsih’s
thesis  is  the  further  analysis  after  analyzing  the  vocabulary  choices.  The  further analysis of this present thesis is about the viewpoint of media, while further analysis
of Estiningsih’s thesis is the news ideologies.
B. Review of Related Theories
1. Theory of Discourse Analysis
Discourse  analysis  according  to  James  Paul  Gee  in  his  book  ―How  to  do Discourse  Analys
is‖  is  the  study  of  language  in  use.  Better  put,  it  is  the  study  of language at use in the world, not just to say things, but to do things 2011: ix. Later
Margaret  Wetherell  explains  that  discourse  is  constitutive  of  social  life.  Discourse builds object, worlds, minds and social relations. It does not just reflect them. Words
are about the world but they also form the world as they represent it. What is the case for humans, what reality is, what the world is, only emerges through human meaning-
making  Wetherell,  2001:  16.  By  those  elaborations,  it  can  be  concluded  that discourse analysis concerns with the analysis of how language can do something and
how  discourse  constitutes  social  life,  and  how  social  life  in  the  world  only  emerges through  human  meaning-making.  For  example,  language  can  be  used  to  build
reputations,  manage  social  relations  among  people,  or  event  it  can  be  used  to  harm people. All of those things are possible just by language, whose meanings are made
by people to do those kinds of things. Relating to the human meaning-making through the discourse, it is important
to  examine the aspect  of cohesion  of the discourse itself. Halliday and Hasan stated that,
Cohesion  refers  to  the  range  of  possibilities  that  exist  for  linking  something with what has gone before. Since this linking is achieved through the relation
of meaning, what is in question is the set of meaning relations which function this  way:  the  semantic  resources  which  are  drawn  on  for  the  purpose  of
creating  text.  We  can  interpret  cohesion,  in  practice,  as  the  set  of  semantic resources for linking a sentence with what has gone before 1976: 10
Cohesion is expressed partly through the grammar and partly through the vocabulary. We  can  refer  therefore  to  lexical  cohesion  and  grammatical  cohesion.  Lexical
cohesion  deals  with  reiteration  and  collocation  while  grammatical  cohesion  deals with reference, substitution, ellipsis, and conjunction.