Publications
Brunner, Marie-Louise. 2019. ‘You’ll need help from your adult assistant’: Readership accommodation in children’s recipes. Text & Talk 39 (4) : 441–464.
Schmader, Christopher and William S. Horton. 2019. Conceptual Effects of Audience Design in Human–Computer and Human–Human Dialogue. Discourse Processes 56 (2) : 170–190.
Garcia, Angela Cora. 2018. Presidential campaign talk: Question-answering in ‘Neutral Informational Interviews’. Discourse & Society 29 (3) : 256–278.
O’Sullivan, Joan. 2018. Advanced Dublin English as audience and referee design in Irish radio advertising. The “initiative” role of advertising in the construction of identity. English World-Wide 39 (1) : 60–84.
Wang, Hua and Arvind Singhal. 2018. Audience-centered discourses in communication and social change: the ‘Voicebook’ of Main Kuch Bhi Kar Sakti Hoon, an entertainment-education initiative in India. Journal of multicultural discourses 13 (2) : 176–191.
Joy, Jack. 2017. Eulogies for the Resistance. Hizbullah, Syria and the ‘Crisis Imaginary’. Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication 10 (2,3) : 272–292.
Virtanen, Tuija. 2017. Adaptability in online consumer reviews: Exploring genre dynamics and interactional choices. Journal of Pragmatics 116 : 77–90.
Birnie-Smith, Jessica Rae. 2016. Ethnic identity and language choice across online forums. The International Journal of Multilingualism 13 (2) : 165–183.
Kirk, Justin Ward. 2016. Mitt Romney in Denver. “Obamacare” as ideological enthymeme. Journal of Argumentation in Context 5 (3) : 227–248.
Kirkham, Sam and Emma Moore. 2016. Constructing social meaning in political discourse: Phonetic variation and verb processes in Ed Miliband's speeches. Language in Society 45 (1) : 87–111.
Conradie, Marthinus. 2015. Winning the audience: A Relevance theoretic analysis of us-them relationships in a text on hiv/aids. Language Matters: Studies in the Languages of Africa 46 (2) : 159–179.
Dako, Kari. 2015. Should it be Omanhenes, Amanhenes or Amanhene? - or are they in free variation? Language Matters: Studies in the Languages of Africa 46 (1) : 44–59.