Article published In:
The interpersonal functions of public signs during the Covid-19 pandemic
Edited by Eva Ogiermann
[Pragmatics and Society 14:2] 2023
► pp. 210235
References
Backhaus, Peter
2007Linguistic Landscapes. A Comparative Study of Urban Multilingualism in Tokyo. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters.Google Scholar
Ben-Rafael, Eliezer, Elana Shohamy, Muhammad Amara, and Nira Trumper-Hecht
2006Linguistic Landscape as Symbolic Construction of the Public Space: The Case of Israel. International Journal of Multilingualism 3 (1): 7–30. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Blommaert, Jan, James Collins, and Stef Slembrouck
2005Polycentricity and Interactional Regimes in ‘Global Neighborhoods’. Ethnography 6 (2): 205–235. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Blommaert, Jan, and Ico Maly
2014Ethnographic Linguistic Landscape Analysis and Social Change: A Case Study. Tilburg Papers in Culture Studies 100.Google Scholar
Collins, James, and Stef Slembrouck
2007Reading Shop Windows in Globalized Neighbourhoods: Multilingual Literacy Practices and Indexicality. Journal of Literacy Research 39 (3): 335–356. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Desson, Zachary, Emmi Weller, Peter McMeekin, and Mehdi Ammi
2020An Analysis of the Policy Responses to the COVID-19 Pandemic in France, Belgium, and Canada. Health Policy and Technology 9 (4): 430–446. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gorter, Durk
2006Introduction: The Study of the Linguistic Landscape as a New Approach to Multilingualism. International Journal of Multilingualism 3 (1): 1–6. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Huebner, Thom
2006Bangkok’s Linguistic Landscapes: Environmental Print, Codemixing and Language Change. International Journal of Multilingualism 3 (1): 31–51. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Janssens, Rudi
2012The Linguistic Landscape as a Political Arena: The Case of the Brussels Periphery in Belgium. In Linguistic Landscapes, Multilingualism and Social Change, Christine Hélot, Monica Barni, Rudi Janssens and Carla Bagna (eds), 39–52. Berlin: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Jaworski, Adam, and Crispin Thurlow
2010Semiotic Landscapes: Language, Image, Space. London: Continuum.Google Scholar
Jaworski, Adam, and Jackie Jia Lou
2020#wordswewear: Mobile Texts, Expressive Persons, and Conviviality in Urban Spaces. Social Semiotics 31 (1): 108–135. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kailuweit, Rolf, and Aldina Quintana
2020The Language of Public Mourning: De- and Reterritorialization of Public Spaces as a Reaction to Terrorist Attacks. In Reterritorializing Linguistic Landscapes Questioning Boundaries and Opening Space, David Malinowski and Stefania Tufi (eds), 284–306. London: Bloomsbury. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Leeman, Jennifer, and Gabriella Modan
2009Commodified Language in Chinatown: A Contextualized Approach to Linguistic Landscape. Journal of Sociolinguistics 13 (3): 332–362. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Maerevoet, Ellen, Denny Baert, Michaël Torfs, Floor Bruggeman, and Freek Willems
2020LIVEBLOG: België neemt “verregaande maatregelen” tegen corona: alleen nog “essentiële verplaatsingen” toegestaan. VRT NWS, March 17, 2020. [URL]
Moriarty, Máiréad
2014Languages in Motion: Multilingualism and Mobility in the Linguistic Landscape. International Journal of Bilingualism 18 (5): 457–463. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Oosterlynck, Stijn, Maarten Loopmans, Nick Schuermans, Joke Vandenabeele, and Sami Zemni
2016Putting Flesh to the Bone: Looking for Solidarity in Diversity, Here and Now. Ethnic and Racial Studies 39 (5): 764–782. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Paelinck, Gianni
2020Na de eerste Belgische corona-besmetting: “Het protocol heeft zeer goed gewerkt, het virus is onder controle”. VRT NWS, February 4, 2020. [URL]Google Scholar
Papen, Uta
2012Commercial Discourses, Gentrification and Citizen’s Protest: The Linguistic Landscape of Prenzlauer Berg, Berlin. Journal of Sociolinguistics 16 (1): 56–80. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Scollon, Ron, and Suzie Wong Scollon
2003Discourses in Place: Language in the Material World. London and NY: Routledge. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Sebba, Mark
2010Discourses in Transit. In Semiotic Landscapes: Language, Image, Space, Adam Jaworski and Crispin Thurlow (eds), 59–76. London: Continuum.Google Scholar
Shohamy, Elana
2012Linguistic Landscapes and Multilingualism. In The Routledge Handbook of Multilingualism, Marilyn Martin-Jones, Adrian Blackledge and Angela Creese (eds), 538–551. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Stjernø, Steinar
2004Solidarity in Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tourinho, Emmanuel Zagury, Aécio Borba, Christian Vichi, and Felipe Lustosa Leite
2011Contributions of Contingencies in Modern Societies to “Privacy” in the Behavioral Relations of Cognition and Emotion. The Behavior Analyst 34 (2): 171–180. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Vandenbroucke, Mieke
2015Language Visibility, Functionality and Meaning Across Various TimeSpace Scales in Brussels’ Multilingual Mandscapes. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 36 (2): 163–181. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2016Socio-economic Stratification of English in Globalized Landscapes: A Market-oriented Perspective. Journal of Sociolinguistics 20 (1): 86–108. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2018Multilingualism, Urban Change and Gentrification in the Landscape of a Brussels Neighbourhood. Multilingua 37 (1): 25–52. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Van Mensel, Luk, Mieke Vandenbroucke, and Robert Blackwood
2016Linguistic Landscapes. In Oxford Handbook of Language and Society, Ofelia García, Nelson Flores and Massimiliano Spotti (eds), 423–449. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Wee, Lionel
2016Situating Affect in Linguistic Landscapes. Linguistic Landscape 2 (2): 105–126. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Zeevi, Irit
2009‘Northern residents, Cellcom is with you’: The Rhetoric of Israeli Advertising during the Second Lebanon War. Media, War & Conflict 2 (2): 191–211. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Zeevi, Irit. and Deborah Dubiner