Volume 33 (2020)Linguistic RecyclingThe process of quoting in increasingly mediatized settings
Edited by Lauri Haapanen & Daniel Perrin
University of Jyväskylä | Zurich University of Applied Sciences
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Linguistic recycling: The process of quoting in increasingly mediatized settingsLauri Haapanen & Daniel Perrin | pp. 1–20
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The invisible supporters: Writing for reuseEva-Maria Jakobs & Claas Digmayer | pp. 21–46
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Linguistic recycling and its relationship to academic conflict: An analysis of authors’ responses to direct quotationSally Burgess & Pedro Martín-Martín | pp. 47–66
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Recycling a genre for news automation: The production of Valtteri the Election BotLauri Haapanen & Leo Leppänen | pp. 67–85
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Linguistic recycling in language acquisition: Child-directed speech and child speech in the study of language acquisitionKlaus Laalo & Reili Argus | pp. 86–103
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Narrative analysis applied to text production: Investigating the processes of quoting in the making of a broadcast news storyGilles Merminod | pp. 104–119
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Reuse in STEM research writing: Rhetorical and practical considerations and challengesChris M. Anson, Susanne Hall, Michael Pemberton & Cary Moskovitz | pp. 120–135
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Quoting to persuade: A critical linguistic analysis of quoting in US, UK, and Australian newspaper opinion textsJen Cope | pp. 136–156
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Reporting quotable yet untranslatable speech: Observations of shifting practices by Japanese newspapers from Obama to TrumpKayo Matsushita | pp. 157–175
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Visuo-material performances: 'Literalized’ quotations in prime minister’s questionsElisabeth Reber | pp. 176–203
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More than recycled snippets of news: Quote cards as recontextualized discourse on social mediaDaniel Pfurtscheller | pp. 204–226
Introduction
Articles