Internet Pragmatics

Main information
Editors
ORCID logoChaoqun Xie | Zhejiang International Studies University | internetpragmatics at foxmail.com
ORCID logoFrancisco Yus | University of Alicante, Spain
Review Editor
ORCID logoSanna-Kaisa Tanskanen | University of Helsinki, Finland

A huge amount of communication is nowadays carried out on the internet, as is reflected in online social networking sites, instant messaging interactions and the emergence of norms of production and interpretation in online communities as regards the discursive construction of digital selves, digital communicative action and digital codes of interaction, among other interfaces for virtual interaction. Internet Pragmatics was launched as a response to the emerging challenges of applying pragmatic perspectives to internet or technologically mediated interaction. The journal provides a unique, fully peer-reviewed forum dedicated to cutting-edge research into internet pragmatics, examining how people use the internet and social media to fulfill their communicative needs, and how those virtual interactions entail pragmatic implications on human relationships, identities and social or professional collectivities. It also seeks to explore and expound how online communication is both similar to and different from offline interaction, how the online world and the offline world are both distinct and inseparable but also intertwined in a number of ways, and how online or digital identities impact on people’s language use in offline interaction and vise versa.

Internet Pragmatics promotes interdisciplinary dialogue and interface studies between pragmatics and other fields including but not limited to sociology, media studies, digital communication, discourse analysis, cognitive science, anthropology, psychology, philosophy and even neuroscience. The journal intends to contribute to a better and deeper understanding of language use and interaction in cyberspace and of human beings in and across mediated contexts.

Internet Pragmatics publishes its articles Online First.

Social media presence:
https://www.facebook.com/ip2018
https://twitter.com/iPragmatics

ISSN: 2542-3851 | E-ISSN: 2542-386X
DOI logo
https://doi.org/10.1075/ip
Latest articles

19 November 2024

  • Emma Betz , Arnulf Deppermann , Lorenza Mondada Marja-Leena Sorjonen (eds). 2021. OKAY across Languages: Toward a Comparative Approach to Its Use in Talk-in-Interaction
    Reviewed by Bingyun Li | IP 7:2 (2024) pp. 331–335
  • Jim O’Driscoll . 2020. Offensive Language: Taboo, Offence and Social Control
    Reviewed by Tianying Zhuo Hongying Ying | IP 7:2 (2024) pp. 326–330
  • 16 September 2024

  • Salience management : The role of metadiscourse in online new product launch conferences
    Ping Liu Wenli Xu
  • 4 June 2024

  • The invitation game : Strategies for launching the prospect of meeting in Danish Tinder chats between male and female users
    Elisabeth Muth Andersen | IP 7:1 (2024) p. 7
  • Introduction : Interactional analysis of social action in online interaction
    Valeria Sinkeviciute | IP 7:1 (2024) pp. 1–6
  • 3 June 2024

  • “Resident superhero” : Community veneration on Facebook
    Kerry Mullan | IP 7:1 (2024) p. 63
  • 28 May 2024

  • Multimodal joint fantasising as a category‑implicative and category‑relations‑implicative action in online multi‑party interaction
    Valeria Sinkeviciute | IP 7:1 (2024) pp. 101–136
  • 13 May 2024

  • Being sensible is now a radical concept I LOVE that quote haha : Quotations in political speeches and user comments
    Anita Fetzer
  • 4 March 2024

  • “I’m only half Korean but I can relate to a lot of what you said” : YouTube comments as second stories in response to “lunchbox moment” narrative videos
    Hanwool Choe Cynthia Gordon | IP 7:1 (2024) pp. 35–62
  • 15 February 2024

  • Flirting and winking in Tinder chats : Emoji, ambiguity, and sequential actions
    Will Gibson | IP 7:2 (2024) pp. 249–271
  • 6 February 2024

  • Humorous but hateful : Linguistic impoliteness and visual dysphemism in anti-Muslim memes
    Thulfiqar H. Altahmazi | IP 7:2 (2024) pp. 219–248
  • 9 January 2024

  • Bonjour la famille! Linguistic strategies for relationship maintenance in African online communities
    Carmen Pérez-Sabater Ginette Maguelouk-Moffo | IP 7:2 (2024) pp. 298–325
  • 3 January 2024

  • Online public denunciation as recursive social practice
    Michael Haugh | IP 7:1 (2024) pp. 161–191
  • 22 December 2023

  • “Facebook’s about to know, Karen” : Mobilising social media to sanction public conduct
    Linda Walz , Jack B. Joyce Natalie Flint | IP 7:1 (2024) pp. 137–160
  • 14 November 2023

  • Parody against hate speech : On how political hate speech can be fought by turning the world upside down
    Marco Trigoso | IP 6:2 (2023) pp. 259–284
  • 17 October 2023

  • Semiotic excess in memes : From postdigital creativity to social violence
    Albin Wagener | IP 6:2 (2023) pp. 239–258
  • Maria Economidou-Kogetsidis , Milica Savić Nicola Halenko (eds). 2021. Email Pragmatics and Second Language Learners
    Reviewed by Xinru Ding | IP 6:2 (2023) pp. 285–291
  • 10 October 2023

  • Introduction : Hate speech in online media
    Mélanie Buchart , Anton Granvik Hartmut E. H. Lenk | IP 6:2 (2023) pp. 149–155
  • 3 October 2023

  • Haters in the spotlight : Gender and socially unacceptable Facebook comments
    Kristina Pahor de Maiti , Jasmin Franza Darja Fišer | IP 6:2 (2023) pp. 173–196
  • 2 October 2023

  • When your neighbor becomes a threat : How COVID-19 divided a community in online discussions
    Mari Pakkala-Weckström | IP 6:2 (2023) pp. 219–238
  • 22 September 2023

  • Neil Sadler . 2022. Fragmented Narrative: Telling and Interpreting Stories in the Twitter Age
    Reviewed by Melike Akay | IP 6:2 (2023) pp. 292–297
  • 18 September 2023

  • Linguistic and discursive properties of hate speech and speech facilitating the expression of hatred : Evidence from Finnish and French online discussion boards
    Simo K. Määttä | IP 6:2 (2023) pp. 156–172
  • 15 September 2023

  • A pragmatic and discourse analysis of hate words on social media
    Mattia Retta | IP 6:2 (2023) pp. 197–218
  • 20 July 2023

  • Psychophysiological effects of evaluative language use on Twitter complaints and compliments
    Nicolas Ruytenbeek , Jens Allaert Marie-Anne Vanderhasselt | IP 7:2 (2024) pp. 193–218
  • IssuesOnline-first articles

    Volume 7 (2024)

    Volume 6 (2023)

    Volume 5 (2022)

    Volume 4 (2021)

    Volume 3 (2020)

    Volume 2 (2019)

    Volume 1 (2018)

    Board
    Advisory Board
    Jenny Arendholz | University of Munich, Germany
    ORCID logoBrook Bolander | Monash University, Australia
    ORCID logoPatricia Bou-Franch | University of Valencia, Spain
    ORCID logoJan Chovanec | Masaryk University, Czech Republic
    ORCID logoDaria Dayter | Tampere University, Finland
    ORCID logoAnita Fetzer | University of Augsburg, Germany
    ORCID logoPilar Garcés-Conejos Blitvich | University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA
    Gu Yueguo | Beijing Foreign Studies University, China
    ORCID logoClaire Hardaker | Lancaster University, UK
    ORCID logoMichael Haugh | University of Queensland, Australia
    Ziran He | Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, China
    ORCID logoTheresa Heyd | Heidelberg University, Germany
    Christian R. Hoffmann | University of Augsburg, Germany
    Gang Hong | Zhejiang International Studies University, China
    ORCID logoAndreas H. Jucker | University of Zurich, Switzerland
    ORCID logoMiriam A. Locher | University of Basel, Switzerland
    Nuria Lorenzo-Dus | University of Swansea, UK
    ORCID logoRuth Page | University of Birmingham, UK
    ORCID logoCaroline Tagg | The Open University, UK
    Elda Weizman | Bar Ilan University, Israel
    ORCID logoMichele Zappavigna | The University of New South Wales, Australia
    Subscription Info
    Current issue: 7:1, available as of June 2024
    Next issue: 7:2, expected December 2024

    General information about our electronic journals.

    Subscription rates

    All prices for print + online include postage/handling.

    Online-only Print + online
    Volume 8 (2025): 2 issues; ca. 320 pp. EUR 164.00 EUR 213.00
    Volume 7 (2024): 2 issues; ca. 320 pp. EUR 159.00 EUR 194.00

    Individuals may apply for a special online-only subscription rate of EUR 55.00 per volume.
    Private subscriptions are for personal use only, and must be pre-paid and ordered directly from the publisher.

    Available back-volumes

    Online-only Print + online
    Complete backset
    (Vols. 1‒6; 2018‒2023)
    12 issues;
    1,920 pp.
    EUR 914.00 EUR 1,030.00
    Volume 6 (2023) 2 issues; 320 pp. EUR 154.00 EUR 176.00
    Volumes 3‒5 (2020‒2022) 2 issues; avg. 320 pp. EUR 154.00 per volume EUR 173.00 per volume
    Volume 2 (2019) 2 issues; 320 pp. EUR 151.00 EUR 170.00
    Volume 1 (2018) 2 issues; 320 pp. EUR 147.00 EUR 165.00
    Guidelines

    General

    Articles should be in English. English spelling and style should be consistently either British or American throughout. If you are not a highly proficient user of English, you should have the paper checked by an English language professional.

    Contributions, maximally 10,000 words in length (including references, an abstract of 100-150 words, 5-8 keywords and a 70-word bio), should be submitted as email attachments in Word to: internetpragmatics at foxmail.com.

    Lay-out

    References

    It is essential that the references are formatted to the specifications given in these guidelines, as these cannot be formatted automatically. This journal uses the ‘Author-Date’ style as described in the latest edition of The Chicago Manual of Style.

    References in the text: These should be as precise as possible, giving page references where necessary; for example (Görlach 2003: 152-154) or: as in Brown et al. (1991: 252). All references in the text should be matched by items in the references section.

    References section: References should be listed first alphabetically and then chronologically. The section should include all (and only!) references that are actually mentioned in the text.

    A note on capitalization in titles. For titles in English, CMS uses headline-style capitalization. In titles and subtitles, capitalize the first and last words, and all other major words (nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, some conjunctions). Do not capitalize: articles; prepositions (unless used adverbially or adjectivally, or as part of a Latin expression used adverbially or adjectivally); the conjunctions and, but, for, or, nor; to as part of an infinitive; as in any grammatical function; parts of proper names that would be lower case in normal text; the second part of a species name. For more details and examples, consult the Chicago Manual of Style. For any other languages, and English translations of titles given in square brackets, CMS uses sentence-style capitalization: capitalization as in normal prose, i.e., the first word in the title, the subtitle, and any proper names or other words normally given initial capitals in the language in question.

    Examples

    Yus, Francisco. 2011. Cyberpragmatics: Internet-Mediated Communication in Context. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

    Book (edited volume):

    Dynel, Marta, and Jan Chovanec (eds). 2015. Participation in Public and Social Media Interactions. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

    Article (in book):

    Arundale, Robert B. and David Good. 2002. “Boundaries and sequences in studying conversation.” In Rethinking Sequentiality: Linguistics Meets Conversational Interaction, ed. by Anita Fetzer, and Christiane Meierkord, 121-150. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

    Article (in journal):

    Claes, Jeroen, and Luis A. Ortiz López. 2011. “Restricciones pragmáticas y sociales en la expresión de futuridad en el español de Puerto Rico [Pragmatic and social restrictions in the expression of the future in Puerto Rican Spanish].” Spanish in Context 8: 50–72.

    Haugh, Michael, Wei-Lin Melody Chang, and Dániel Z. Kádár. 2015. “’Doing deference’: Identities and relational practices in Chinese online discussion boards.” Pragmatics 25(1): 73-98.

    Please use ample margins and 1.5 line spacing.

    Do not use running heads and avoid full justification and ‘stiff’ hyphenation. Examples, quotations, tables, headings etc. should be presented in a clear and consistent way, so that they can be identified and formatted in the style of our journal. References should be given in accordance with our style sheet (‘Instructions to Authors’); font enhancements (such as italics, bold face, caps, small caps, etc.) may be applied directly in the text itself.

    Whatever formatting or style conventions are employed, please be consistent.

    Tables and figures

    All tables, figures, and trees must fit within the page size as specified below:

    4.5” x 7.5” (≈ 11,5 cm x 19 cm)

    Please be aware that prior to typesetting, the pages will have to be reduced in size; any lettering etc. should be big enough to be legible also after reduction. Suggested font setting for main text: Times (New) Roman 12 pts. For tables and footnotes: Times Roman 10 pts (absolute lowest size: 8 pts).

    Tables and figures should be numbered consecutively and provided with appropriate captions. They should be referred to in the main text as “Table 2”, “Figure 3”, etc. (avoid expressions such as “in the following table: ...” or “See the figure below.”).

    Please indicate the preferred positioning of tables and figures in the text in this way:

    ---------------------------

    INSERT FIG 1 HERE

    ---------------------------

    Running heads

    It is not necessary to provide running heads. For articles with long titles (which in general should be avoided), a shortened version (max. 55 characters), to be used as running head, may be provided on the cover sheet of your contribution.

    Emphasis and foreign words:

    Use italics for words in languages other than English as well as for emphasis.

    Boldface should be used only for highlighting words within italicized stretches and for headings.

    Please refrain from the use of FULL CAPS (except for focal stress and abbreviations). Using small caps is sometimes a viable option.

    Do not use underlining except when conventionally required in your field of research. (It is OK to use underlining for highlighting within examples as an alternative to boldface).

    For conventionally used terms or expressions (e.g., ‘context of situation’), please

    use single quotes; these may also be used as ‘scare quotes’ to focus attention on a particular word or expression. For glosses and directly quoted forms and expressions, always use double quotes.

    Sections and headings

    Articles should be conveniently divided into sections and, if necessary, subsections. If you do not use electronic styling, please mark section headings as follows:

    Level 1 = bold italics, one line space before, section number flush left. Text starts immediately below.

    Level 2 = italics, one line space before, section number flush left. Text starts immediately below.

    Level 3ff = italics, one line space before, section number flush left. Headings end with a full stop, with the text following on the same line.

    Numbering should be in Arabic numerals (no Roman numbers for footnotes either!). Do not use italics for numbering; use full stops between numbers and after the last number, thus:

    Section 1. ...

    Section 2.3.1. ....

    Quotations

    In-text quotations should be given in double quotation marks.

    Quotations longer than three lines should be indented left and right, without quotation marks, followed by the appropriate reference to the source on a separate line (left adjusted). Such long quotations should be set off from the main text by a line of space above and below.

    Lists

    Should not be indented. If numbered, please number as follows:

    1. .....................

    (or a. .......................)

    2. .....................

    (or b. .......................)

    Lists that run on with the main text may be numbered using parentheses:

    (1).............., (2)............., etc.

    Examples and glosses

    Examples should be numbered with Arabic numerals in parentheses, thus: (1) ...; (2) ...; etc..

    Examples in languages other than English should be in italics; an approximate translation should be provided. Between the original and the translation lines, a line with glosses (and in cases of more ‘exotic’ languages, a line containing a morphemic breakdown) may be added. Such interlinear information is given without punctuation or highlighting. For the abbreviations in the interlinear gloss, CAPS may be used; these will be converted to small caps by our typesetters in the final formatting.

    Please note that lines 1 and 2 are lined up through the use of spaces: it is essential that the number of elements in lines 1 and 2 match. If two words in the example correspond to one word in the gloss use a full stop to glue the two together (2a). Morphemes are separated by hyphens (1, 2b).

    Every next level in the example gets one indent/tab.

    (1)

    Kare

    wa

    besutoseraa

    o

    takusan

    kaite-iru.

     


    he

    TOP

    best-seller

    ACC

    many

    write-PERF

    “He has written many best-sellers.’”

    (2)

    a.

    Jan

    houdt van

    Marie.

     


     


    Jan

    loves

    Marie

    “Jan loves Marie.”

        


    b.

    Ed

    en

    Floor

    gaan

    samen-wonen.

     


     


    Ed

    and

    Floor

    go

    together-live.INF

    “Ed and Floor are going to live together.”

     

    For glossing (where applicable), use the Leipzig Glossing Rules (www.eva.mpg.de/lingua/resources/glossing-rules.php). Use small caps, not full caps for category labels: green~att-m.pl, not green~ATT-M.PL.

    Notes

    Notes should be kept to a minimum and should be submitted as numbered endnotes.

    ***Note: indicators in the text should appear at the end of sentences or phrases, and follow the respective punctuation marks.

    Funding information

    Funding information should be provided if funding was received through a grant for the research that is discussed in the article, including funder name and grant number, in a separate section called "Funding information" before (an Acknowledgment section and) the References.

    Acknowledgments

    Acknowledgments (other than funding information, see above) should be added in a separate, unnumbered section entitled "Acknowledgments", placed before the References.

    Appendices

    Appendices should follow the References.

    Submission

    When submitting your article, please observe the following:

    Make sure that you submit the final, clean version of the manuscript, together with all accompanying files (figures etc., if submitted separately).

    All pages should be numbered throughout.

    As the journal follows a double blind reviewing process, authors should avoid any self-identifying elements in the manuscript. If reference to one’s own work is needed, the word “Author” can be used.

    The first page of the manuscript should contain the title, a self-contained abstract (100-150 words) and 5-8 keywords. On a separate page, authors should provide the title of the article, the author’s name and affiliation, full postal and e-mail address and a short bio (max. 70 words).

    Authors are responsible for observing the laws of copyright when quoting or reproducing material.

    File naming conventions

    When naming your files please use the following conventions: Use the first three characters of the first author’s last name, followed by the proper three character file extension. For example, if that name is Johnson, the respective document file should be named JOH.DOC. Do not use the three character extension except for identifying the file type, as provided by the system (e.g. JOH.DOC is OK, but not JOH.ART, JOH.REV; instead use JOHART.DOC, JOHR1.DOC, etc.). Figures, tables etc. should be named using the appropriate standard extensions, e.g. JOH1.EPS, JOH2.TIF, JOH3.XLS, etc.

    Software

    MS Word (PC or Mac) is our preferred submission format, although other formats are possible as well. If, for some reason, a different format is required than the one supplied, we will contact you.

    Graphic files

    Please supply figures as converted to Encapsulated Postscript (EPS) or Tagged Image File Format (TIFF) in addition to the original creation files. (Note that the typesetters cannot make corrections or changes in figures that are supplied as graphics).

    Proofing procedure

    The first author of a contribution will receive a PDF of first proofs of the article for correction via email and will be requested to return the corrections to the journal editor within 7 days of receipt. Acrobat Reader can be downloaded for free from www.adobe.com which will enable you to read and print the file. Please limit corrections to the essential. It is at the publisher’s discretion not to implement substantial textual changes or to charge the author. If it is absolutely necessary to change larger chunks of text (i.e. more than just a few words), it is best to submit the changes on disk (with identical hard copy).

    Please contact the journal editor if you cannot handle proofs for your article in electronic format (i.e., receive the proofs as a PDF-attachment at your email address).

    All editorial correspondence and books for review should be sent to the Editor:

    Prof. Chaoqun Xie
    internetpragmatics at foxmail.com

    Submission

    Internet Pragmatics invites submissions in line with the aim and scope of the journal, which may be submitted electronically to the editor at internetpragmatics at foxmail.com .

    Before submitting, please consult these guidelines.

    Ethics

    John Benjamins journals are committed to maintaining the highest standards of publication ethics and to supporting ethical research practices.

    Authors and reviewers are kindly requested to read this Ethics Statement .

    Please also note the guidance on the use of (generative) AI in the statement.

    Rights and Permissions

    Authors must ensure that they have permission to use any third-party material in their contribution; the permission should include perpetual (not time-limited) world-wide distribution in print and electronic format.

    For information on authors' rights, please consult the rights information page.

    Open Access

    Articles accepted for this journal can be made Open Access through payment of an Article Publication Charge (APC) of EUR 1800 (excl. tax). To arrange this, please contact openaccess at benjamins.nl once your paper has been accepted for publication. More information can be found on the publisher's Open Access Policy page.

    Corresponding authors from institutions with which John Benjamins has a Read & Publish arrangement can publish Open Access without paying a fee. Please consult this list of institutions for up-to-date information on which articles qualify.

    For information about permission to post a version of your article online or in an institutional repository ('green' open access or self-archiving), please consult the rights information page.

    If the article is not (to be made) Open Access, there is no fee for the author to publish in this journal.

    Archiving

    John Benjamins Publishing Company has an agreement in place with Portico for the archiving of all its online journals and e-books.

    Subjects

    Communication Studies

    Communication Studies

    Main BIC Subject

    CFG: Semantics, Pragmatics, Discourse Analysis

    Main BISAC Subject

    LAN009030: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Pragmatics