Editorial published In:
Chronotopes and the COVID-19 Pandemic
Edited by Anna De Fina and Sabina M. Perrino
[Language, Culture and Society 4:2] 2022
► pp. 9397
References
Bakhtin, M. M.
(1981) The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Black, S. P.
Chun, W. C.
(2020) The return of the ‘Yellow Peril’. Language, Culture and Society 2(2), 252–259. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Delfino, J. B.
(2021) White Allies and the Semiotics of Wokeness: Raciolinguistic Chronotopes of White Virtue on Facebook. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 31(2), 238–257. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Dick, H. P.
(2010) Imagined Lives and Modernist Chronotopes in Mexican Nonmigrant Discourse. American Ethnologist 37 (2), 275–90. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Du Bois, W. E. B.
(1903) The souls of black folk. Chicago: A. C. McClurg and Co.Google Scholar
Du, Y.
(2020) “I don’t feel like talking about it”. Language, Culture and Society 2(2), 260–268. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gilroy, P.
(1993) The Black Atlantic. Modernity and Double Consciousness. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Hartikainen, E. I.
(2017) Chronotopic Realignments and the Shifting Semiotics and Politics of Visibility in Brazilian Candomblé Activism. Signs and Society 5(2), 356–389. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
MiRCo
(2020) Pandemic discourses and the prefiguration of the future. Language, Culture and Society 2(2), 227–241. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Pratt, M. L.
(1991) Arts of the contact zone. Profession 911, 33–40.Google Scholar
Rosa, J.
(2016) Racializing Language, Regimenting Latinas/os: Chronotope, Social Tense, and American Raciolinguistic Futures. Language & Communication 461, 106–17. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
San Diego Bakhtin Circle (EDs.)
(2000) Bakhtin and the nation. Lewisburg, Pa.: Bucknell University Press.Google Scholar
Silva, D. N. & Lee, J. W.
(2021) “Marielle, presente”: Metaleptic temporality and the enregisterment of hope in Rio de Janeiro. Journal of Sociolinguistics 25(2), 179–197. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
van Toorn, P.
(1992) Bakhtin and the Novel as Empire: Textual Politics in Robert Drewe’s The Savage Crows and Rudy Wiebe’s The Temptations of Big Bear. The Journal of Commonwealth Literature 27(1), 96–109. DOI logoGoogle Scholar