LINGUIST List 22.1223

Mon Mar 14 2011

TOC: Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives...

Editor for this issue: Justin Petro <justinlinguistlist.org>


        1.     Christopher Tancock , Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives on News Production

Message 1: Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives on News Production
Date: 14-Mar-2011
From: Christopher Tancock <c.tancockelsevier.com>
Subject: Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives on News Production
E-mail this message to a friend

Publisher: Elsevier Ltd
http://www.elsevier.com/linguistics

Journal Title: Journal of Pragmatics Volume Number: 43 Issue Number: 7 Issue Date: 2011


Subtitle: Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives on News Production


Main Text:

1. IntroductionPages 1841-1842Geert Jacobs, Tom Van Hout, Ellen Van Praet

2. Towards a linguistics of news productionPages 1843-1852Paola Catenaccio, Colleen Cotter, Mark De Smedt, Giuliana Garzone, Geert Jacobs,Felicitas Macgilchrist, Lutgard Lams, Daniel Perrin, John E. Richardson, Tom VanHout, Ellen Van Praet and NewsTalk&Text Research Group

3. Newspapers’ narratives based on wire stories: Facsimiles of input?Pages 1853-1864Lutgard Lams

4. “There are two different stories to tell” – Collaborative text-pictureproduction strategies of TV journalistsPages 1865-1875Daniel Perrin

5. Writing from news sources: The case of Apple TVPages 1876-1889Tom Van Hout, Henk Pander Maat, Wim De Preter

6. Diversity awareness and the role of language in cultural representations innews storiesPages 1890-1899Colleen Cotter

7. Press conferences on the Internet: Technology, mediation and access in the newsPages 1900-1911Geert Jacobs

Regular Papers

8. Sociocultural influences and prosodic variationsPages 1912-1928Chantal Paboudjian

9. The use of reversed polarity repetitional questions during history takingPages 1929-1945Yujong Park

10. A quantitative comparative study of right-dislocation in Catalan and SpanishPages 1946-1961Xavier Villalba

11. Non-straightforward communicationPages 1962-1976Kees Hengeveld, Evelien Keizer

12. Bias in perspective-taking during reading: Adjusting the knowledge ofcharactersPages 1977-1986Sergio Moreno-Ríos, M Ángeles Rodríguez-Menchen, Isabel Rodríguez-Gualda

13. The role of pragmatics in grammatical change: The case of French preverbal nonPages 1987-1996Pierre Larrivée

14. A model of ethnographic discourse analysis for an interdisciplinary teamPages 1997-2011Iris Manor-Binyamini

15. Rhetorical comparatives: Polarity items, expletive negation, and subjunctivemoodPages 2012-2033Suwon Yoon

16. Probabilistic theories of reasoning need pragmatics too: Modulatingrelevance in uncertain conditionalsPages 2034-2042Andrew J.B. Fugard, Niki Pfeifer, Bastian Mayerhofer

17. Re-conceptualizing scale boundaries: The case of Dutch helemaalPages 2043-2056Elena Tribushinina, Theo Janssen

18. Referential choice in Mandarin child language: A discourse-pragmaticperspectivePages 2057-2080Chiung-chih Huang

19. Pauses, gaps and wait time in classroom interaction in primary schoolsPages 2081-2093Barbara Maroni



For more information on this Special Issue, please visit:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/issue/5965-2011-999569992-3001749Or visit the journal homepage: http://www.elsevier.com/locate/pragma


Linguistic Field(s): Discourse Analysis                             Historical Linguistics                             Pragmatics                             Sociolinguistics                             Text/Corpus Linguistics                             Discipline of Linguistics
Subject Language(s): Chinese, Mandarin (cmn)                             Catalan-Valencian-Balear (cat)                             Dutch (nld)                             English (eng)                             Italian (ita)                             Korean (kor)                             Spanish (spa)                             Middle French (frm)                             Old French (fro)
This Year the LINGUIST List hopes to raise $67,000. This money will go to help keep the List running by supporting all of our Student Editors for the coming year. See below for donation instructions, and don't forget to check out Fund Drive 2011 site! http://linguistlist.org/fund-drive/2011/ There are many ways to donate to LINGUIST! You can donate right now using our secure credit card form at https://linguistlist.org/donation/donate/donate1.cfm Alternatively you can also pledge right now and pay later. To do so, go to: https://linguistlist.org/donation/pledge/pledge1.cfm For all information on donating and pledging, including information on how to donate by check, money order, or wire transfer, please visit: http://linguistlist.org/donation/ The LINGUIST List is under the umbrella of Eastern Michigan University and as such can receive donations through the EMU Foundation, which is a registered 501(c) Non Profit organization. Our Federal Tax number is 38-6005986. These donations can be offset against your federal and sometimes your state tax return (U.S. tax payers only). For more information visit the IRS Web-Site, or contact your financial advisor. Many companies also offer a gift matching program, such that they will match any gift you make to a non-profit organization. Normally this entails your contacting your human resources department and sending us a form that the EMU Foundation fills in and returns to your employer. This is generally a simple administrative procedure that doubles the value of your gift to LINGUIST, without costing you an extra penny. Please take a moment to check if your company operates such a program. Thank you very much for your support of LINGUIST!

New!
Multi-tree Visit
LL's Multitree project for over 1000 trees dynamically generated from scholarly hypotheses about language relationships:
            http://multitree.linguistlist.org/

Page Updated: 14-Mar-2011