Publications
Potter, Jonathan, Alexa Hepburn and Galina B. Bolden. 2019. Subversive Completions: Turn-Taking Resources for Commandeering the Recipient’s Action in Progress. Research on Language & Social Interaction 52 (2) : 144–158.
Potter, Jonathan, Alexa Hepburn and Galina B. Bolden. 2019. Subversive Completions: Turn-Taking Resources for Commandeering the Recipient’s Action in Progress. Research on Language and Social Interaction 52 (2) : 144–158.
Machi, Saeko. 2019. Managing relationships through repetition. How repetition creates ever-shifting relationships in Japanese conversation. Pragmatics 29 (1) : 57–82.
Matwick, Keri and Kelsi Matwick. 2019. Humor and Performing Gender on TV Cooking Shows. Humor 32 (1) : 125–146.
Cots, Josep María and Montserrat Mir. 2019. The use of humor in Spanish and English compliment responses: A cross-cultural analysis. Humor 32 (3) : 393–416.
Moody, Stephen J. 2019. Contextualizing macro-level identities and constructing inclusiveness through teasing and self-mockery: A view from the intercultural workplace in Japan. Journal of Pragmatics 152 : 145–159.
Pichler, Pia. 2019. ‘He's got Jheri curls and Tims on’: Humour and indexicality as resources for authentication in young men's talk about hair and fashion style. Journal of Pragmatics 152 : 172–185.
Ruiz-Guerillo, Leonor. 2019. Performing gender through stand-up comedy in Spanish. The European Journal of Humour Research 7 (2) : 67–86.
Sinkeviciute, Valeria. 2019. Conversational Humour and (Im)politeness. A pragmatic analysis of social interaction. (Topics in Humor Research 8). John Benjamins.
Artamonova, Olga. 2018. Teacher’s ethnic teasing: Playing with ambiguity and exploiting in-group communication. Discourse & Society 29 (1) : 3–22.
Goddard, Cliff. 2018. “Joking, kidding, teasing”: Slippery categories for cross-cultural comparison but key words for understanding Anglo conversational humor. Intercultural Pragmatics 15 (4) : 487–515.
McGhee, Paul E. 2018. Chimpanzee and gorilla humor: progressive emergence from origins in the wild to captivity to sign language learning. Humor 31 (2) : 405–450.
Airenti, Gabriella. 2016. Playing with Expectations: A Contextual View of Humor Development. Frontiers in Psychology 7 (1392) : 1–12.
Schnurr, Stephanie and Seongsook Choi. 2016. Enacting and negotiating power relations through teasing in distributed leadership constellations. Pragmatics and Society 7 (3) : 482–502.
Haugh, Michael. 2016. “Just kidding”: Teasing and claims to non-serious intent. Journal of Pragmatics 95 : 120–136.
Adetunji, Akin. 2013. A discursive construction of teasing in football fandom: The context of the South-Western Nigerian viewing center. Discourse & Society 24 (2) : 147–162.
Aronsson, Karin and Anna Gradin Franzén. 2013. Teasing, laughing and disciplinary humor: Staff–youth interaction in detention home treatment. Discourse Studies 15 (2) : 167–183.
Sinkeviciute, Valeria. 2013. Decoding encoded (im)politeness. “Cause on my teasing you can depend”. In Dynel, Marta, ed. Developments in Linguistic Humour Theory. (Topics in Humor Research 1). John Benjamins. pp. 263–288.
Blythe, Joe. 2012. From passing-gesture to ‘true’ romance: Kin-based teasing in Murriny Patha conversation. Journal of Pragmatics 44 (4) : 508–528.
Chan, Angela and Stephanie Schnurr. 2011. When laughter is not enough. Responding to teasing and self-denigrating humour at work. Journal of Pragmatics 43 (1) : 20–35.