Abstract
Academic event report on 15th International Pragmatics Conference (IPra2017), 16-21 July 2017, Belfast, Northern Ireland
References
Archakis, A. & Tsakona, V. (2005) ‘Analyzing conversational data in GTVH terms: A new approach to the issue of identity construction via humor’. Humor: International Journal of Humor Research 18 (1), pp. 41–68.
Duszak, A. ed. (2002). Us and Others: Social Identities across Languages, Discourses and Cultures. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Ekström, M. & Johansson, B. (2008) ‘Talk scandals’. Media Culture and Society 30 (1), pp. 61-79.
Fairclough, N. (1992) Discourse and Social Change. Cambridge: Polity.
Lee, F.L.F. (2012). ‘The life cycle of iconic sound bites: politicians’ transgressive utterances in media discourses’. Media, Culture, & Society 34 (3), pp. 343-358.
Milner, R. M. (2013). ‘Pop polyvocality: Internet memes, public participation, and the Occupy Wall Street Movement’. International Journal of Communication 7, pp. 2357-2390.
Reilly, I. (2012). ‘Satirical fake news and/as American political discourse’. The Journal of American Culture 35 (3), pp. 258-275.
Sanina, A. G. (2014). ‘Visual political irony in Russian new media’. Discourse, Context & Media 6, pp. 11-21.
Santa Ana, O. (2009) ‘Did you call in Mexican? The racial politics of Jay Leno immigrant jokes’. Language in Society 38 (1), pp. 23–45.
Silverstein, M. (2011). ‘Presidential ethno-blooperology: Performance misfires in the business of "message"-ing’. Anthropological Quarterly 84 (1): 165-186.
Waisanen, D. J. (2011). ‘Crafting hyperreal spaces for comic insights: The Onion News Network's ironic iconicity’. Communication Quarterly 59 (5), pp. 508-528