Publications
Dulebova, Irina and Linda Krajchovichova. 2021. The humorous dimension of intertextual relations in contemporary Slovak creolized media text. The European Journal of Humour Research 9 (1) : 87–104.
Astapova, Anastasiya. 2020. Soviet meta-jokes: Tradition and continuity. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (3) : 60–82.
Badarneh, Muhammad A. 2020. ‘Like a donkey carrying books’ : Intertextuality and impoliteness in Arabic online reader responses. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 8 (1) : 1–28.
Capelotti, João Paulo. 2020. The dangers of controlling memes through copyright law. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (3) : 115–136.
Dore, Margherita. 2020. Intertextuality and failed taboo humour in advertising. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (3) : 99–114.
Dynel, Marta. 2020. COVID-19 memes going viral:: On the multiple multimodal voices behind face masks. Discourse & Society 32 (2) : 175–195.
María Jesús, Pinar-Sanz. 2020. Humour and intertextuality in Steve Bell’s political cartoons. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (3) : 16–39.
Tsakona, Villy and Jan Chovanec. 2020. Revisiting intertextuality and humour: Fresh perspectives on a classic topic. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (3) : 1–15.
Villy, Tsakona. 2020. Scrutinising intertextuality in humour: Moving beyond cultural literacy and towards critical literacy. The European Journal of Humour Research 8 (3) : 40–59.
Al Zidjaly, Najma. 2019. Divine impoliteness: How Arabs negotiate Islamic moral order on Twitter. Russian Journal of Linguistics 23 (4) : 1039–1064.
Bullo, Stella. 2019. Clichés as evaluative resources: A socio-cognitive study. Text & Talk 39 (3) : 289–314.
Guo, Mengjun. 2019. Intertextuality and nationalism discourse: a critical discourse analysis of microblog posts in China. Asian Journal of Communication 29 (4) : 328–345.
Ivashkiv, Roman. 2019. (Un)translatibility revisited: Transmetic and intertextual puns in Viktor Pelevin’s generation “P” and its translations. The European Journal of Humour Research 7 (1) : 109–125.
Kristoffersen, Cherise. 2019. Where do my words come from? Towards methods for analyzing word choice in primary level writing. Apples - Journal of Applied Language Studies 13 (3).
Kristoffersen, Cherise. 2019. Where do my words come from? Towards methods for analyzing word choice in primary level writing. Apples - Journal of Applied Language Studies 13 (3) : 59–75.
Sierra, Sylvia. 2019. Linguistic and ethnic media stereotypes in everyday talk: Humor and identity construction among friends. Journal of Pragmatics 152 : 186–199.
Bondi, Marina. 2018. Blogs as interwoven polylogues. The dialogic action game. Language and Dialogue 8 (1) : 43–65.
Labotka, Lori. 2018. “I have to read it out loud”: Intertextuality in prison discipline. Language in Society 47 (2) : 269–290.
Manuel, Nicolau Nkiawete and David Cassels Johnson. 2018. Intertextuality across Angolan medium of instruction policy texts, discourses, and practices. Current Issues in Language Planning 19 (2) : 161–182.
Ready, Carol. 2018. Maintaining the status quo. Diglossia and the case of Arabic language policy in Ceuta. Language Problems and Language Planning 42 (2) : 173–195.
Sebba-Elran, Tsafi. 2018. The intertextual Jewish joke at the turn of the twentieth century and the poetics of a national renewal. Humor 31 (4) : 603–622.