Results 71 to 80 of about 4,224 (214)

Polycode as display if interdiscoursivity in Spanish scientific discourse

open access: yesPolylinguality and Transcultural Practices, 2011
The article deals with polycode as display of interdiscoursivity in scientific and technical texts on material of Spanish language.
E A Dolzhich
doaj  

Making moral selves through comparison: Narratives of moral decline and the modern virtuous self among middle‐class older adults in Nepal

open access: yesEthos, Volume 53, Issue 3, September 2025.
Abstract During fieldwork among older adults in middle‐class families in the city of Bhaktapur (2018–2019), I recurrently came across comparative narratives of moral decline, depicting a stark contrast between the present time and a mythical past where ageing parents were treated “as gods.” In this paper, I analyze how, through acts of comparisons ...
Paola Tinè
wiley   +1 more source

Linguistic Hauntings at the Margins of China

open access: yesJournal of Sociolinguistics, Volume 29, Issue 4, Page 237-249, September 2025.
ABSTRACT This study examines emotional and material traces lingering in the aftermath of forced linguistic landscape transformations in Inner Mongolia following the implementation of a new assimilationist national language policy in 2022. Drawing on ethnographic and linguistic landscape data, the study specifically examines how the multilingual signs ...
Gegentuul Baioud
wiley   +1 more source

Contracting worlds : the many autonomies of private law [PDF]

open access: yes, 2005
Deutsche Fassung: Vertragswelten: Das Recht in der Fragmentierung von private governance regimes. Rechtshistorisches Journal 17, 1998, 234-265. Italienische Fassung: Mondi contrattuali. Discourse rights nel diritto privato.
Teubner, Gunther
core  

Translating the Commune: Cultural Politics and the Historical Specificity of the Anarchist Text [PDF]

open access: yes, 1994
Translating the Commune: Cultural Politics and the Historical Specificity of the Anarachist Text — This essay deals with three interrelated matters: the first is the role of discourse analysis and the conscious theorization of discourse typologies ...
Bruce, Donald
core   +1 more source

Patriotic rabbits or toxic men? Media ideology, entextualization, and enregisterment on Chinese interfaces

open access: yesJournal of Linguistic Anthropology, Volume 35, Issue 2, August 2025.
Abstract This article argues that social actors' media ideologies about digital interfaces are key to the enregisterment of online activities. Focusing on an online register emergent from user activities around Year, Hare, Affair (YHA)—a state‐aligned Chinese animation—I explore how different metadiscourses evaluate this register by entextualizing ...
Jiarui Sun
wiley   +1 more source

Lágyrész-sérülések korlátozott igazságügyi megítélhet sége. [PDF]

open access: yes, 2014
The results of the present study confirm the hypothesis that MDRIs can be characterised by interdiscursivity, predominantly due to the inconsistent use of terms and the absence of important features of soft tissue injuries in the three analysed ...
Fogarasi Katalin
core  

The Oslo Museum Puzzle. Reflections on the relation between culture and economy

open access: yesFORMakademisk, 2011
The decision has been made to relocate several cultural institutions in Oslo, without any existing plans for the old premises. In this article, the supportive arguments are analysed against the backdrop of the critical voices.
Joar Skrede
doaj   +1 more source

Interdiscursivity: Conventions, Gaps, and Renegades

open access: yesAnnual Review of Anthropology
This review argues for renewed attention to interdiscursivity—processes through which linguistic or other semiotic elements taken from one context are integrated into another, forging links among texts, contexts, and people. We examine historical and institutional structures that guide processes of interdiscursivity to focus on three interconnected ...
Jillian R. Cavanaugh   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Public deaths and negotiation opportunities: Cats, dogs and people in COVID China

open access: yesThe Australian Journal of Anthropology, Volume 36, Issue 2, Page 376-389, August 2025.
Abstract Under the extraordinary circumstances of COVID, some health workers in China ruthlessly killed pet dogs and cats, which were thought to be dangerous virus vectors. Heart‐wrenching images circulated widely on social media, where some social media commentators used them as a basis to make accusations about generalised Chinese brutality towards ...
Chenyu Zong
wiley   +1 more source

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