Publications
Liliya Duskaeva. 2021. Humour as an information resource in the media. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (1) : 1–6.
Pozdena, Emese . 2020. Cultural dimensions and characteristics reflected in Hungarian TED talk. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (2) : 62–67.
Chattoo, Caty Borum. 2019. A funny matter: Toward a framework for understanding the function of comedy in social change. Humor 32 (3) : 499–524.
Brzozowska, Dorota and Władysław Chłopicki. 2019. The Chinese as targets in Polish humorous discourse. Humor 32 (2) : 235–266.
Fitzgerald, Richard and Göran Eriksson. 2019. Web-TV as a backstage activity: Emerging forms of audience address in the post-broadcast era. Text & Talk 39 (1) : 47–67.
Howell, William. 2019. Judgments, Corrections, and Audiences: Amy Schumer's Strategies for Narrowcast Satire. Studies in American Humor 5 (1) : 70–92.
Kirsch, Griseldis. 2019. POST-SCRIPT FROM FILM STUDIES: Whose choice? Watching non-English language films in the UK. Multilingua 38 (5) : 619–624.
Warner, Richard. 2019. Meaning, reasoning, and common knowledge. Intercultural Pragmatics 16 (3) : 289–304.
Aijón Oliva, Miguel Ángel. 2018. Not just you: The construction of radio audiences through second-person choice in Peninsular Spanish. Language & Communication 60 : 80–93.
Chaemsaithong, Krisda. 2018. Investigating audience orientation in courtroom communication. The case of the closing argument. Pragmatics and Society 9 (4) : 545–570.
Gambier, Yves and Elena Di Giovanni, eds. 2018. Reception Studies and Audiovisual Translation. (Benjamins Translation Library 141). John Benjamins.
Ivanova, Olga. 2018. Overcoming discursive prohibitions in participatory media: A case study on talk about homosexuality in Tanzania. Language & Communication 58 : 34–46.
Sharma, Devyani. 2018. Style dominance: Attention, audience, and the ‘real me’. Language in Society 47 (1) : 1–31.
Chen, Xi and Yi Sun. 2018. A diachronic analysis of metaphor clusters in political discourse. A comparative study of Chinese and American presidents’ speeches at universities. Pragmatics and Society 9 (4) : 626–653.