Publications
Galasiński, Dariusz, ed. 2010. The Post-Communist Condition. Public and private discourses of transformation. (Discourse approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 37). John Benjamins.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 2002. The verbal construction of non-verbal behaviour: The British press reports of President Clinton's grand jury testimony video. Discourse & Society 13 (5) : 629–649.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 2002. Looking across the river: German-Polish border communities and the construction of the Other. Journal of Language and Politics 1 (1) : 23–58.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 2000. Unilateral Norm Breaking in a Presidential Debate: Lech Walesa Versus Aleksander Kwasniewski. Research on Language and Social Interaction 33 (3) : 321–345.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 2000. Vocative address forms and ideological legitimization in political debates. Discourse Studies 2 (1) : 35–53.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 2000. Photography, memory and the construction of identities on the former East-West German border. Discourse Studies 2 (3) : 323–353.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 1999. Review of $Foreign policy and discourse analysis: France, Britain and Europe. Discourse & Society 10 (1) : 138–140.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 1998. Academic Mission Statements: an exercise in negotiation. Discourse & Society 9 (4) : 457–479.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 1998. Review of $Reading 'The Prostitute'. Discourse & Society 9 (4) : 569–570.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 1998. Strategies of talking to each other. Rule breaking in Polish presidential debates. Journal of Language and Social Psychology 17 (2) : 165–182.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 1998. Agency in foreign news: A linguistic complement of a content analytical study. Journal of Pragmatics 30 (5) : 565–587.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 1998. The last Romantic hero: Lech Walesa's image-building in TV presidential debates. Text 18 (4) : 525–544.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 1997. Background and discourse analysis: A response to Jan Blommaert. Pragmatics 7 (1) : 83–97.
Galasiński, Dariusz. 1997. The making of history: Some remarks on politicians' presentation of historical events. Pragmatics 7 (1) : 55–68.