Publications
Dynel, Marta. 2020. COVID-19 memes going viral:: On the multiple multimodal voices behind face masks. Discourse & Society 32 (2) : 175–195.
Dynel, Marta. 2018. Taking cognisance of cognitive linguistic research on humour. Review of Cognitive Linguistics 16 (1) : 1–18.
Dynel, Marta. 2017. Academics vs. American scriptwriters vs. academics: A battle over the etic and emic “sarcasm” and “irony” labels. Language & Communication 55 : 69–87.
Dynel, Marta. 2017. But seriously: On conversational humour and (un)truthfulness. Lingua 197 : 83–102.
Dynel, Marta. 2017. Approaching conversational humour culturally: A survey of the emerging area of investigation. Language & Communication 55 : 1–9.
Dynel, Marta. 2016. Comparing and combining covert and overt untruthfulness. On lying, deception, irony and metaphor. Pragmatics & Cognition 23 (1) : 174–208.
Dynel, Marta. 2016. Killing Two Birds with One Deceit. Deception in Multi-Party Interactions. International Review of Pragmatics 8 (2) : 179–218.
Dynel, Marta. 2016. With or without intentions: Accountability and (un)intentional humour in film talk. Journal of Pragmatics 95 : 67–78.
Dynel, Marta, ed. 2015. Participation in Public and Social Media Interactions. (Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 256). John Benjamins.
Dynel, Marta. 2014. A Survey of “Intercultural Pragmatics” and Its Outlook on the Gricean Philosophy of Communication. International Review of Pragmatics 6 (2) : 307–319.
Dynel, Marta, ed. 2013. Developments in Linguistic Humour Theory. (Topics in Humor Research 1). John Benjamins.
Dynel, Marta. 2013. Impoliteness as disaffiliative humour in film talk. In Dynel, Marta, ed. Developments in Linguistic Humour Theory. (Topics in Humor Research 1). John Benjamins. pp. 105–144.
Dynel, Marta. 2013. When does irony tickle the hearer? Towards capturing the characteristics of humorous irony. In Dynel, Marta, ed. Developments in Linguistic Humour Theory. (Topics in Humor Research 1). John Benjamins. pp. 289–320.
Dynel, Marta. 2012. Setting our House in order: The workings of impoliteness in multi-party film discourse. Journal of Politeness Research 8 (2) : 161–194.