22.1223, TOC: Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives...

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LINGUIST List: Vol-22-1223. Mon Mar 14 2011. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 22.1223, TOC: Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives...

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1)
Date: 14-Mar-2011
From: Christopher Tancock [c.tancock at elsevier.com]
Subject: Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives on News Production
 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Mon, 14 Mar 2011 12:41:02
From: Christopher Tancock [c.tancock at elsevier.com]
Subject: Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives on News Production

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Publisher:	Elsevier Ltd
			http://www.elsevier.com/linguistics 			
			
Journal Title:  Journal of Pragmatics 
Volume Number:  43 
Issue Number:  7 
Issue Date:  2011 


Subtitle:  Journal of Pragmatics Special Issue - Discursive Perspectives on News Production   


Main Text:  

1. Introduction  
Pages 1841-1842
Geert Jacobs, Tom Van Hout, Ellen Van Praet    

2. Towards a linguistics of news production  
Pages 1843-1852
Paola Catenaccio, Colleen Cotter, Mark De Smedt, Giuliana Garzone, Geert Jacobs,
Felicitas Macgilchrist, Lutgard Lams, Daniel Perrin, John E. Richardson, Tom Van
Hout, Ellen Van Praet and NewsTalk&Text Research Group

3. Newspapers' narratives based on wire stories: Facsimiles of input?   
Pages 1853-1864
Lutgard Lams   

4. "There are two different stories to tell" - Collaborative text-picture
production strategies of TV journalists  
Pages 1865-1875
Daniel Perrin    

5. Writing from news sources: The case of Apple TV  
Pages 1876-1889
Tom Van Hout, Henk Pander Maat, Wim De Preter    

6. Diversity awareness and the role of language in cultural representations in
news stories  
Pages 1890-1899
Colleen Cotter   

7. Press conferences on the Internet: Technology, mediation and access in the news
Pages 1900-1911
Geert Jacobs
    

Regular Papers

8. Sociocultural influences and prosodic variations
Pages 1912-1928
Chantal Paboudjian   

9. The use of reversed polarity repetitional questions during history taking 
Pages 1929-1945
Yujong Park     

10. A quantitative comparative study of right-dislocation in Catalan and Spanish  
Pages 1946-1961
Xavier Villalba   

11. Non-straightforward communication 
Pages 1962-1976
Kees Hengeveld, Evelien Keizer

12. Bias in perspective-taking during reading: Adjusting the knowledge of
characters  
Pages 1977-1986
Sergio Moreno-Ríos, M Ángeles Rodríguez-Menchen, Isabel Rodríguez-Gualda    

13. The role of pragmatics in grammatical change: The case of French preverbal non  
Pages 1987-1996
Pierre Larrivée  

14. A model of ethnographic discourse analysis for an interdisciplinary team  
Pages 1997-2011
Iris Manor-Binyamini    

15. Rhetorical comparatives: Polarity items, expletive negation, and subjunctive
mood
Pages 2012-2033
Suwon Yoon

16. Probabilistic theories of reasoning need pragmatics too: Modulating
relevance in uncertain conditionals 
Pages 2034-2042
Andrew J.B. Fugard, Niki Pfeifer, Bastian Mayerhofer

17. Re-conceptualizing scale boundaries: The case of Dutch helemaal
Pages 2043-2056
Elena Tribushinina, Theo Janssen    

18. Referential choice in Mandarin child language: A discourse-pragmatic
perspective  
Pages 2057-2080
Chiung-chih Huang

19. Pauses, gaps and wait time in classroom interaction in primary schools  
Pages 2081-2093
Barbara Maroni



For more information on this Special Issue, please visit: 
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/issue/5965-2011-999569992-3001749 
Or visit the journal homepage: http://www.elsevier.com/locate/pragma 


Linguistic Field(s): Discourse Analysis
                     Historical Linguistics
                     Pragmatics
                     Sociolinguistics
                     Text/Corpus Linguistics
                     Discipline of Linguistics

Subject Language(s): Chinese, Mandarin (cmn)
                     Catalan-Valencian-Balear (cat)
                     Dutch (nld)
                     English (eng)
                     Italian (ita)
                     Korean (kor)
                     Spanish (spa)
                     Middle French (frm)
                     Old French (fro)


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