Article published In:
Linguistics in the Netherlands 2022
Edited by Jorrig Vogels and Sterre Leufkens
[Linguistics in the Netherlands 39] 2022
► pp. 7287
References
Bartlett, Jamie, Jeremy Reffin, Noelle Rumball & Sarah Williamson
2014 “Anti-social media”. Demos: 1–51.Google Scholar
Beukeboom, Camiel J. & Christian Burgers
2019 “How Stereotypes Are Shared Through Language: A Review and Introduction of the Social Categories and Stereotypes Communication (SCSC) Framework”. Review of Communication Research 71: 1–37. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Bianchi, Claudia
2014 “Slurs and Appropriation: An Echoic Account”. Journal of Pragmatics 66(5): 1–62. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Bolinger, Renée J.
2017 “The pragmatics of slurs”. Noûs 51(3): 439–462. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Camp, Elisabeth
2013 “Slurring perspectives”. Analytic Philosophy 54(3): 330–349. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Croom, Adam M.
2013 “How to do things with slurs: Studies in the way of derogatory words”. Language & Communication 33(3). 177–204. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Carnaghi, Andrea & Anne Maass
2007 “In-group and out-group perspectives in the use of derogatory group labels: Gay versus fag”. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 261: 142–156. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Carnaghi, Andrea, Anne Maass, Sara Gresta, Mauro Bianchi, Mara Cadinu & Luciano Arcuri
2008 “Nomina sunt omina: on the inductive potential of nouns and adjectives in person perception”. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 94(5): 839. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Davis, Christopher & Elin McCready
2020 “The instability of slurs”. Grazer Philosophische Studien 97(1): 63–85. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Falbo, Arianna
2021 “Slurs, neutral counterparts, and what you could have said”. Analytic Philosophy 62(4): 359–375, DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Fasoli, Fabio, Andrea Carnaghi & Maria P. Paladino
2015 “Social acceptability of sexist derogatory and sexist objectifying slurs across contexts”. Language Sciences 521: 98–107. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gutzmann, Daniel
2015Use-conditional meaning: Studies in multidimensional semantics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Hogeweg, Lotte
In prep. “The use of Dutch slurs on Twitter – a descriptive-expressive continuum”.
Hom, Christopher
2008 “The semantics of racial epithets”. Journal of Philosophy 1051: 416–440. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Hornsby, Jennifer
2001 “Meaning and Uselessness: How to Think about Derogatory Words”. Midwest Studies In Philosophy 25(1): 128–141. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Jeshion, Robin
2016 “Slur creation, bigotry formation: The power of expressivism”. Phenomenology and Mind 111: 130–139Google Scholar
McCready, Elin
2010 “Varieties of conventional implicature”. Semantics and Pragmatics 31: 8–1. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
McCready, Elin & Christopher Davis
2017 “An Invocational Theory of Slurs”. In: Proceedings of LENLS 141. JSAI.Google Scholar
Nunberg, Geoff
2018 “The social life of slurs”. New work on speech acts ed. by Daniel Fogal, Daniel Harris, and Matt Moss. 237–295. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
O’Dea, Conor J., Stuart S. Miller, Emma B. Andres, Madelyn H. Ray, Derrick F. Till, & Donald A. Saucier
2015 “Out of bounds: Factors affecting the perceived offensiveness of racial slurs”. Language Sciences 521: 155–164. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Potts, Christopher
2007 “The expressive dimension”. Theoretical Linguistics 331.165–97. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Rahman, Jacquelyn
2012 “The N word: its history and use in the African American community”, Journal of English Linguistics, 401. 137–171. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Cited by

Cited by 1 other publications

Hogeweg, Lotte
2023. Dutch slurs and the descriptive-expressive distinction. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 8:1 DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 28 march 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.