Publications
Cohen-Achdut, Miri. 2019. Self-quotations and politeness: The construction of discourse events and its pragmatic implications. Text & Talk 39 (3) : 341–362. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Messerli, Thomas C. 2019. Subtitles and cinematic meaning-making: Interlingual subtitles as textual agents. Multilingua 38 (5) : 529–546. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Omar, Ahmed Abdulhameed. 2019. Strategic Maneuvering for Political Change. A pragma-dialectical analysis of Egyptian anti-regime columns. (Argumentation in Context 16). John Benjamins. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Pascual, Esther and Sergeiy Sandler. 2019. In the beginning there was conversation. Fictive direct speech in the Hebrew Bible. Pragmatics 29 (2) : 250–276. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Ait Abdeslam, Abderrahim. 2018. The vilification of Muslim diaspora in French fictional novels: ‘Soumission’ (2015) and ‘Petit Frère’ (2008) as case studies. Journal of multicultural discourses 13 (3) : 232–242. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Antović, Mihailo. 2018. Waging war against oneself: A conceptual blend at the heart of Christian ascetic practice. In Chilton, Paul and Monika Kopytowska, eds. Religion, Language, and the Human Mind. Oxford University Press. pp. 386–406. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Segal, Alex. 2018. Jokes, aporia and undecidability. The European Journal of Humour Research 6 (1) : 1–11. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Harrison, Chloe. 2017. Cognitive Grammar in Contemporary Fiction. (Linguistic approaches to literature 26). John Benjamins. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Wooffitt, Robin, Catherine Woods and Rachael Hayward. 2015. The transgressive that: Making the world uncanny. Discourse Studies 17 (6) : 703–723. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Jucker, Andreas H. 2015. Pragmatics of fiction: Literary uses of uh and um. Journal of Pragmatics 86 : 63–67. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Lugg, Alexander. 2011. Chinese online fiction: taste publics, entertainment, and Candle in the Tomb. Chinese Journal of Communication 4 (2) : 121–136. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Mishra, Ramesh Kumar and Niharika Singh. 2010. Online Fictive Motion Understanding: An Eye-Movement Study With Hindi. Metaphor and Symbol 25 (3) : 144–161. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Sams, Jessie. 2009. Genre-controlled constructions in written language quotatives: A case study of English quotatives from two major genres. In Corrigan, Roberta, Edith Moravcsik, Hamid Ouali and Kathleen M. Wheatley, eds. Formulaic Language. Volume 1. Distribution and historical change. (Typological Studies in Language 82). John Benjamins. pp. 147–170. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Dancygier, Barbara. 2008. The text and the story: Levels of blending in fictional narratives. In Oakley, Todd and Anders Hougaard, eds. Mental Spaces in Discourse and Interaction. (Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 170). John Benjamins. pp. 51–78. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Gillespie, Gerald, Manfred Engel and Bernard Dieterle, eds. 2008. Romantic Prose Fiction. (Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages XXIII). John Benjamins. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Manning, Paul. 2008. Barista rants about stupid customers at Starbucks: What imaginary conversations can teach us about real ones. Language & Communication 28 (2) : 101–126. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Maryl, Maciej. 2008. The Apology of Popular Fiction: Everyday Uses of Literature in Poland. In Bortolussi, Marisa, Sonia Zyngier, Anna Chesnokova and Jan Auracher, eds. Directions in Empirical Literary Studies. In honor of Willie van Peer. (Linguistic approaches to literature 5). John Benjamins. pp. 317–328. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Morris, Robyn. 2008. Food, race and the power of recuperative identity politics within Asian Australian women's fiction. Journal of Australian Studies 32 (4) : 499–508. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)