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English
Routledge
24 January 2018
This collection brings together contributions from both leading and emerging scholars in one comprehensive volume to showcase the richness of linguistic approaches to the study of pop culture and their potential to inform linguistic theory building and analytical frameworks. The book features examples from a dynamic range of pop culture registers, including lyrics, the language of fictional TV series, comics, and musical subcultures, as a means of both providing a rigorous and robust description of these forms through the lens of linguistic study but also in outlining methodological issues involved in applying linguistic approaches. The volume also explores the didactic potential of pop culture, looking at the implementation of pop culture traditions in language learning settings. This collection offers unique insights into the interface of linguistic study and the broader paradigm of pop culture scholarship, making this an ideal resource for graduate students and researchers in applied linguistics, English language, media studies, cultural studies, and discourse analysis.

Edited by:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   498g
ISBN:   9781138051706
ISBN 10:   1138051705
Series:   Routledge Studies in Linguistics
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary ,  A / AS level
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
"Part I: Context 1. Linguistics and pop culture: Setting the scene(s) Valentin Werner 2. Pop culture and linguistics – is that, like, a thing now? Joe Trotta Part II: Comics 3. Pardon my French... and German… and Spanish...: (Mis)speaking in tongues in Marvel comics Shane Walshe 4. Linguistic discourse in web comics: Extending conversation and narrative into alt-text and hidden comics Frank Bramlett Part III: Music and Lyrics 5. Pop culture and the globalization of non-standard varieties of English: Jamaican Creole in German reggae subculture Michael Westphal 6. ""Britpop is a thing, damn it"": On British attitudes toward American English and an Americanized singing style Lisa Jansen Part IV: TV and Movies 7. Variation in movies and television programs: The impact of corpus sampling Marcia Veirano Pinto 8. Verbal humor in crime drama television: A cognitive-linguistic approach to popular TV series Christoph Schubert Part V: Pop meets EFL 9. An analysis of pop songs for teaching English as a foreign language: Bridging the gap between corpus analysis and teaching practice Theresa Summer 10. Song lyrics: From Multi-Dimensional Analysis to the foreign language classroom Patricia Bértoli 11. (Im)politeness rituals in The Young Pope and teaching pragmatics Silvia Bruti Epilogue 12. Analyzing pop culture Monika Bednarek"

Valentin Werner is assistant professor of English and Historical Linguistics at the University of Bamberg. His recent publications include two books on the present perfect (2014, 2016), a co-edited special issue of the International Journal of Learner Corpus Research (2018), and contributions to journals such as English Language and Linguistics, English World-Wide, and Corpora.

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