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Investigating Musical Taxonomy in the era of Streaming Platforms: Insights from Rap music through actual consumption data Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-31
Myriam Boualami, Camille RothThis paper examines the musical boundaries that emerge from the distinct consumption patterns of rap audiences. Using the actual listening histories of around 1000 French users of the music streaming platform Deezer, we apply dimensionality reduction and clustering methods to explore the musical boundaries that emerge from distinctive audience consumption patterns, with a particular focus on rap music
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Culture as configurations of categories: Analyzing peer effects via dual-to-regression modeling Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-28
Ronald L. Breiger, Alessandro Lomi, Francesca PallottiIn this paper we reimagine linear regression modeling as a relational method for cultural analysis. Drawing on the dual-to-regression analytic approach (Schoon, Melamed & Breiger, 2024), we argue that the fundamental building blocks in a regression equation are not single variables, but configurations of variables manifested by clusters of cases. In a study of peer effects and achievement in an academic
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Krajšavar—an Algorithm for Recognizing English Abbreviations in Texts Related to Criminal Justice and Security Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-05-28
Mojca Kompara Lukančič, Tilen SmajlaIn the paper, we try to classify texts from the criminal justice and security field according to the classification for LSP (Language for Specific Purpose) texts prepared by Mikolič (2007) for the typology of tourism texts. Within that classification, we outline the current position held by the LSP field of criminal justice and security in Slovenia and the development of field-specific terminology
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Dictionaries versus AI Tools through the Eyes of English Majors Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-05-27
Bartosz Ptasznik, Robert LewChatGPT has stirred debates in lexicographic circles, raising questions about its future role in the work of lexicographers. Between October 2023 and June 2024, this study investigated the opinions of 225 Polish students of English, focusing on their use of ChatGPT alongside monolingual and bilingual lexical tools. Our results indicate that ChatGPT is generally regarded as an effective aid for writing
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La fin du livre et la « préface incessante » de Derrida French Cultural Studies (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-05-26
Minho KimFrom the 1980s onwards, Derrida began writing numerous experimental and playful texts, particularly in the form of prefaces. This article first explores why Derrida uses the preface as a textual laboratory, then shows that, after ‘the end of the book’, the preface is both an impossible mode of writing and the only permitted mode of writing. Derrida takes Hegel as both a precursor and an adversary:
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Exploring biracial identities and experiences through the #biracialproblems hashtag on TikTok Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-05-23
Mel Monier -
FrameNet at 25: Results and Applications Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-05-23
Hans C Boas, Josef Ruppenhofer, Collin F BakerThis paper, a follow-up to Boas/Ruppenhofer/Baker (2024), reports on the results and applications of the FrameNet database. It spells out how FrameNet data have been used in linguistic theory, computational linguistics, multilingual lexicography, and foreign language teaching and learning. The paper also provides more information about the organization of the FrameNet project, inlcuding organizational
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“If NPR doesn’t see this as a crisis, I don’t know what it’ll take”: How journalists use digital platforms to make industry critiques Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-22
Laura Garbes, Thomas MarlowThis Research Notes piece explores how journalists use digital platforms to shift conversations about a single event into broader critiques about their industry. In this paper, we document this shift in the case of Audie Cornish’s departure from National Public Radio. We analyze a corpus of 7886 tweets related to her 2022 move from public radio to CNN. How did journalists respond to the event via digital
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“The algorithm loves the war”: ambivalent visibility in content creator practices during war Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-05-21
Marie Heřmanová, Moa Eriksson Krutrök, Tom Divon -
The digital departed: how we face death, commemorate life, and chase virtual immortality Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-05-12
Paula Kiel -
“For the Benefit of my Countrymen”: Cultural Context and Lemma Choice in Early 20th-Century Dictionaries for Immigrants Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-05-08
Alenka Vrbinc, Marjeta Vrbinc, Donna M T Cr FarinaAn immigrant dictionary has been defined as a reference work specifically designed for an immigrant audience. The need for dictionaries with this audience has increased, given the movement of peoples in the 21st century. Lexicography requires a deeper understanding of the nature of such dictionaries. In the present study, we delve into lemma choice: Which lemmata should the lexicographer choose to
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Suspenseful indirectness in gangster film dialogue: A pragma-stylistic study of Scorsese’s mob bosses Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-08
Christoph SchubertIn gangster movies, mob bosses typically communicate their criminal objectives to henchmen or adversaries in opaque ways. This type of discursive behaviour considerably contributes to the creation of suspense for film audiences, since a startling sense of uncertainty and anticipation is evoked until the intimidatory words eventually culminate in violent actions. This paper adopts a qualitative pragma-stylistic
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Developments in autofictional genre signals: Nouns, pronouns and authorial attachment Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Alexandra EffeAutofiction is characterized by ambiguation of generic conventions. While postmodern autofictional texts often explicitly comment on genre, much autofiction avant-la-lettre merges generic modes more subtly, namely through narrative structure and style. The article argues that, therefore, in the exploration of autofiction in a diachronic perspective, consideration of stylistic and narratological details
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Diachronic perspectives on digital reading culture: Crying readers from the age of sensibility to BookTok Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Dorothee BirkeThis article uses a diachronic approach to examine how on social media platforms such as YouTube and TikTok, readers of fiction discuss and also stage strong affects connected with their reading of ‘books that made me cry’. While this trend may seem to be generated wholly by the affordances of digital media, it will be examined in what interesting ways it also connects with the eighteenth-century vogue
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Reconfigured reality in scenarios of transformed identity, invasion and environmental threat: The diachronic exploration of recognition scenes in anglophone print and film narratives Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Hilary DuffieldThe paper presents key results in the diachronic analysis of recognition (Aristotle’s concept of anagnorisis ) in works of Anglophone narrative fiction and film. Its focus is on the developing cognitive diversity in the representation of character responses during the cognitive-emotional crux which occurs at the heart of the recognition scene. The three forms covered are the recognition of close relationships
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The conventional organisation of request sequences in Scottish letters (1570–1750) Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Christine ElsweilerThis study explores a possible change in politeness conventions in Scottish correspondence written between 1570 and 1750. It is hypothesised that longer request sequences, that is, macro-requests, will display a diachronic shift towards a more prominent use of addressee-oriented face-enhancing speech acts as supportive moves, for instance, compliments or thanking, which have been found to be typical
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Chaucerian modernities: (De)-constructing literary history in The Canterbury Tales Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Andrew James JohnstonThis article discusses Chaucer’s perspective on the ideological structures that inform the writing of literary history. In the first verses of the Franklin’s Tale , Chaucer first engenders and then deconstructs an – implicit – teleological narrative of literary history that links questions of genre, orality and history only to deconstruct, in almost the same breath, that very narrative by poetic means
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The reader in the text across time and genres Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Claudia ClaridgeThe development of uses of reader (third-person and vocative) are investigated in the Corpus of Late Modern English Text (1710-1920) with regard to frequencies and functions. Overall, reader declines, indicating a shift away from nominal and more formal style. Third-person uses are more common than vocatives, which cluster especially in the early nineteenth century and in emotive, personalized texts
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Disinherited protagonists in the early history of T/V variation in Middle English Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Olga TimofeevaMiddle English is the essential stage in the development of English second-person pronouns. This is the time when honorific forms ye / you / your emerge, as commonly believed under French influence, gradually become default, and eventually oust the inherited singular forms thou / thee / thi(ne) to marked contexts and regionally restricted varieties. This paper addresses the initial stages of these
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Diachronicity: An issue shared between linguistics and literary studies Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-05-06
Monika Fludernik, Olga TimofeevaBoth linguists and literary scholars deal with change over time. This special issue approaches the question of diachronic development from a comparative perspective, contrasting the ways in which analysis of changes observable in literary texts over the centuries is handled in the realm of literary studies and how linguists discuss language-specific (dis)continuities from one period to the other. For
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Understanding Thai EFL Teachers’ and Students’ Perspectives on Digital Dictionary Use in the Post-Pandemic Era Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-05-03
Atipat BoonmohThis study examines EFL teachers and students in Thai universities’ perspectives on digital dictionary use, particularly in the context of technological advancements and the COVID-19 pandemic. A survey of 74 teachers and 900 students revealed significant differences in their dictionary preferences. While teachers preferred comprehensive online learners’ dictionaries for their accuracy and depth, students
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Rape and Revenge (2017): the male gaze and fourth wave feminist rage in rape-revenge film Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-05-02
Bonnie Evans -
Towards a cognitive forensic stylistics: An intercoder reliability test for replicable feature finding in the Operation Heron corpus Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-04-26
Matthew Voice, Chloe Harrison, Tim Grant, Marcello GiovanelliThis paper reports an initial application of contemporary cognitive stylistics to forensic linguistic contexts. In both areas, a need has been identified for robust analyses. An intercoder reliability study was developed using data from a historic authorship analysis case involving single-authored hate mail. Exploring the applicability of Cognitive Grammar’s notion of construal as a reliable framework
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Mapping relational structures in culture Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-22
Marco Serino, Thierry Rossier, Elisa Klüger, Fabien EloireCulture is a relational concept, and the empirical manifestations of culture are worth being analysed in a structural vein to unveil the patterns of relations constituting them. Critical to exploring the intersections of culture and structure are relational methodologies, especially geometric data analysis (GDA) and social network analysis (SNA). Over the years, these two perspectives – as distinct
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Review of Breeze, Gintsburg & Baynham (2022): Narrating Migrations from Africa and the Middle East Narrative Inquiry (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Maheen Haider AlipoorThis article reviews Narrating Migrations from Africa and the Middle East 9781350274549
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Abstraction in storytelling Narrative Inquiry (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Stephen PihlajaDiscussions of storytelling and narrative have encompassed abstraction in different ways including master narratives (Bamberg, 1997) and storylines (Harré & van Lagenhove, 1998). These discussions, however, have often viewed storytelling and abstraction as a binary distinction, rather than a spectrum where speakers move between different levels of abstraction when recounting experiences. This article
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Assessing coherence and fidelity Narrative Inquiry (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Mehmet Ali Üzelgün, Hossein Turner, Rahmi Oruç, Goncagül ŞahinNon-fictional narratives have an open-ended character that projects roles and values to those who participate in them. Narrative participation, in turn, entails narrative assessment and identification processes, through which adherence to values and positions may fail or be achieved. In the analysis of interviews with university students across Turkey, we draw on Fisher’s narrative paradigm to focus
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Narratives of stressful and traumatic personal experience disclosed by students with mental health conditions in medical consultations Narrative Inquiry (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Agnieszka SowińskaThis paper advances the field of narratives by focusing on the narratives of personal experience disclosed by students with mental health conditions, in particular depression, anxiety and borderline personality disorder, in medical consultations. I draw on sociolinguistic and discourse-analytic approaches to the analysis of narratives in interaction, viewing language as a tool for constructing social
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Narrative processing and the forms and functions of aggressive behavior Narrative Inquiry (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Qingfang Song, Maria Lent, Dianna Murray-Close, Tong Suo, Qi WangThis study investigated the associations of narrative processing while recounting a past victimization experience with different forms (i.e., physical and relational) and functions (i.e., reactive vs proactive) of aggressive behavior. Moderating effects of respiratory sinus arrhythmia reactivity and gender were explored. Two hundred college students participated in a semi-structured laboratory interview
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Shifting discourses of togetherness and heroism in retold earthquake stories Narrative Inquiry (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Hayden Blain, Paul MillarThis paper examines how disaster-related discourses are produced in storytelling, and whether and in what way these discourses may change in the second telling. We examine two sets of retold stories taken from a corpus of 123 retold stories about the 2010/2011 Canterbury earthquakes in New Zealand. Findings indicate that these storytellers tell structurally similar stories, yet implement subtle linguistic
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How Turkish citizens perceive Syrian refugees in Turkey Narrative Inquiry (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Merve Armağan-Boğatekin, Ivy K. HoTurkey is the largest refugee host country in the world with about 3.5 million registered Syrian refugees. In this study, we explored intergroup relations between Syrian refugees and Turks in Turkey. We focused on how Turkish people perceived Syrian refugees in Turkey and how these two groups interacted daily. We used an adaptation of McAdams’ Life Story Interview and asked questions about Syrian refugees
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Turning points as a tool in narrative research Narrative Inquiry (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Malin Wieslander, Håkan LöfgrenThis article focuses on how the concept of “turning points” can be used in narrative research when studying people’s (professional) identities and identity formation. By examining various understandings of turning points, we aim to show how they can be identified and used as analytical tools in different ways when conducting narrative analyses of (professional) identity formation. A case study from
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Love, actually Narrative Inquiry (IF 0.9) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Alaina Leverenz, Jennifer G. Bohanek, Robyn FivushIndividuals create both personal and culturally shared meaning through narratives; however, sparse research has explored the specific ways in which individuals might use such cultural narratives in creating meaning from developmentally important experiences. In this study, we examine how emerging adults narrate positive romantic relationships, both because emerging adulthood is critical for the development
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Bach, Beethoven and Brahms again? A computational view on the de facto canon of classical orchestral music in Germany and the USA at the beginning of the 21st century Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-17
Markus Radke, Dr. Steffen Lepa, Melissa PanlasiguiClassical music orchestras are vital to the cultural scenes of both Germany and USA. Despite ongoing discussions on musical canon, gender equality, and repertoire innovation, empirical studies on the actual frequency of performances of individual classical music works in both countries are scarce. In this study, concert programs of professional orchestras from the 2019/20 and 2023/24 seasons were collected
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Gaza speaks through translation: The politics of language on Palestinian social media Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-04-11
Sema Üstün Külünk -
Duality and value realism Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-05
Kyle PuetzClassical Western thought presupposes a value realism, in which values and meanings are part of the “furniture of things.” Ushering in a radical change in the locus of thought, a modern dualistic metaphysics generally rejects external sources of value in favor of understanding meaning and value as a subjective projection of the individual. Because the subject's interiority is the exclusive source of
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Humans or animals? The linguistic representation of animal characters in original and translated Finnish picture books for children Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-30
Katri Priiki, Leena KolehmainenThis article examines pronominal references to anthropomorphic animal characters in contemporary Finnish-language picture books for children ( N = 531). In the Finnish language, the choice of third person pronoun is a key means of distinguishing humans from other animals. The study shows that animal characters in children’s literature are linguistically placed between humans and nonhumans: in about
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The dual clustering of tastes and ties: Extending the notion of relational similarity in cultural fields Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-28
Xinwei Xu, Alessandro Lomi, Christoph StadtfeldSociological research on culture has long conceptualized categorical differentiation in terms of relational “distances” and relied on network imagery to describe the structural properties of fields of cultural production and consumption. Partly constrained by research design, extant research on relational similarity often focuses on either one-mode social networks, or two-mode cultural affiliation
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Case for ecumenical use of network and geometric data analyses in mapping of cultural spaces: Illustration of contemporary French-speaking Swiss theatrical productions Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-22
Pierre Bataille, Marc Perrenoud, Robin Casse, Carole Christe, Mathias RotaThe cross-use of network and geometric data analyses helps understand how the circulation of symbolic goods is structured. It follows specific logic, intersecting economic and symbolic planes in shaping spaces that do not entirely align with political borders. Both help map circulation spaces and understand their operational logic, aiming to visualize the proximities and/or distances between different
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Japanese City Pop and Gen Z in the US: happy, calm, and automated nostalgia Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-03-21
Satomi Sugiyama, Nello Barile -
Professor-writers and machinist-painter-photographers: Investigating the duality between occupational categories and artistic hobbies Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
Neha Gondal, Allison WigenEven though participation in the arts (a.k.a. hobbies) of employed persons has risen steadily since the early twentieth century, research has not systematically explored the relationship between occupations and hobbies. We address this gap by investigating the intersection and cultural co-constitution of these two forms of engagement by drawing on Breiger's influential work on duality. We introduce
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Introduction: popular music, revival and renewal: histories, cultures, practices Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
Lauren Istvandity, Mengyu Luo, John Tebbutt -
Variation in fictional dialogue in A Series of Unfortunate Events Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-03-18
Daniel DuncanThe study of linguistic variation in fiction often concerns the use of dialect features as a tool for characterization; however, its use in situating the author in the construction of the text is less remarked upon. This paper considers both of these uses by examining Lemony Snicket’s usage of four sociolinguistic variables in A Series of Unfortunate Events . ASOUE is of particular interest because
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Cultural power via contaminating dualities Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-15
Michael Lee Wood, Travis AshbyCultural objects possess varying degrees of cultural power, defined as their capacity to directly or indirectly shape beliefs and behavior. Research on cultural objects has identified various ways cultural objects possess cultural power, such as by evoking meanings and emotions and stabilizing and disrupting collective practices. This paper extends research on cultural power by investigating how the
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Networks and Artistic Status Orders in Cultural Fields: The Evolution of Hollywood Filmmaking Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-14
Mark Wittek, Katharina BurgdorfHow do status orders emerge in cultural fields? Our study sheds new light on this question by investigating the interplay of networks and status among Hollywood filmmakers from 1920 to 2000. Information on artistic references and collaborations of more than 9,500 filmmakers retrieved from the Internet Movie Database (IMDb) allows us to examine long-term changes in the social organization of this cultural
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Memorial to the Abolition of Slavery: Nantes’ journey to reckoning with their colonial past French Cultural Studies (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-03-14
Taryn MarcelinoIn this article, I build off the critical work that has engaged with the history of Nantes and the larger question of memorialization in Europe. I analyze the Memorial to the Abolition of Slavery, celebrated as Nantes’ recognition of their colonial past and France's journey to abolition. In my analysis of the Memorial, I consider what is being communicated through the memorial, and the stakes it holds
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Artists as change agents in cross-sector partnerships: A typology Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-04
Ellen Loots, Walter van AndelIn recent years, there has been a resurgence of practices and activities that involve artists and designers as change agents in cross-sector partnerships. These practices are often considered separate from artists’ core activities and remain underexplored in research. This paper aims to classify these practices into a typology, beginning with a conceptual framework informed by initial perceptions of
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Rulenet: Mapping the structure of cultural preferences using association-rules and network graphs Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-04
Neha GondalSociologists have persuasively argued that cultural meaning can be interpreted by analyzing the systems of relations that measure the so-called ‘going together’ of cultural materials. Research investigating cultural tastes and preferences has used this approach to interpret consumption patterns as relational systems using a variety of techniques including multidimensional scaling, two-mode network
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Nonhuman witnessing: war, data, and ecology after the end of the world, by Michael Richardson Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-03-04
Richard A Carter -
Revisiting the Origins of EFL Lexicography: the Pioneering Efforts of Early English-Japanese Pedagogical Dictionaries Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-03-04
Lianzhen Zhao, Xiangqing Wei, Bin Li, Ana Frankenberg-GarciaThe dominant narrative on the origins of English monolingual learners’ dictionaries (MLDs) attributes their development to the EFL teaching and research by West, Palmer and Hornby in the early twentieth century. To date, the pedagogical features of bilingual dictionaries and their value as precursors to learners’ dictionaries have been largely overlooked. In this study, we revisit the genesis of English
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Current Trends in Online Sign Language Dictionaries Int. J. Lexicogr. (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-03-04
Rachele SprugnoliThis article examines the current state of many online sign language dictionaries by providing an overview of their primary characteristics and presenting a framework for their description, comparison, and analysis. The main aims are to discuss the diverse characteristics of 54 general dictionaries and to apply a comprehensive analytical framework to 31 of them, highlighting features such as search
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Organizing abundance and shuffling at festivals: the Ferrara Buskers Festival case Poetics (IF 2.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-02
Paolo Ferri, Simone Napolitano, Luca ZanThis paper examines how festivals organize the abundance of their offerings. We argue that festivals organize this abundance differently depending on the interplay between organizers, artists, and festivalgoers as they negotiate their respective autonomy. The concept of ‘shuffling,’ inspired by digital music listening, serves as a framework to empirically explore this dynamic within the context of
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Spectacularisation of ‘madness’ and the sugarcoated discourse of care in Indonesian social media: a dispositive analysis Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-02-28
Ratna Noviani, Heru Nugroho, Derajad Sulistyo Widhyharto, Laillia Dhiah Indriani -
« Certains de nos désirs ont construit cette ville » : Google Earth et glocalisation dans GeoGuessr, Darrieussecq et Houellebecq French Cultural Studies (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-02-26
Gustaf MarcusThis article discusses literary texts and other cultural practices that resemble, refer to, or make use of material from Google Earth. The aim is to elucidate experiences of glocalization (globalization and localization), an emerging form of spatiality that is related to the interactive ‘Web 2.0.’ The initial analysis of the browser game GeoGuessr and the interactive music video ‘The Wilderness Downtown’
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Regards sur l'Inéluctable : la mort dans les romans de Mahi Binebine French Cultural Studies (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-02-19
Hicham BelhajCet article examine la représentation de la mort dans sept romans de Mahi Binebine, Le sommeil de l’esclave (1992), Les funérailles du lait (1994), L’ombre du poète (1997), Cannibales, (1999), Pollens (1999), Terre d’ombre brûlée (2004), et Les étoiles de Sidi Moumen (2010). En s’appuyant sur une approche phénoménologique, l'étude se concentre sur les perceptions et les réactions des personnages face
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Discours hybride dans le contexte colonial au Vietnam. Étude du Bulletin de la SEM French Cultural Studies (IF 0.4) Pub Date : 2025-02-14
Thi Anh Ngoc VOFrench colonization in Vietnam is a totalizing phenomenon, which affected all life, both collective and individual. Many studies are devoted to the memories of this past era with its social contexts and its existential conditions. One of the most visible realities that this phenomenon reveals is that it has destroyed and deconstructed the old frameworks of the culture of colonized people and brought
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Who tells your story: Narration in Hamilton: An American Musical Language and Literature (IF 0.6) Pub Date : 2025-02-11
Alicia MuroThe aim of this paper is to analyse Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Hamilton: An American Musical in terms of its approaches to storytelling and narration. A selection of songs will be analysed focusing on their narrative traits and the figure of the narrator, including its (un)reliability. It will be argued that the songs in Hamilton can be classified depending on their approaches to storytelling, including
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Those old sounds of protest: resurgence and transformation of Nueva Canción Chilena in contemporary Chilean protest music Continuum (IF 0.8) Pub Date : 2025-02-07
Valentina Proust