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Kris' Dissertation Bibliography

  • 1. Bibliography Ajtony, Z. (2008). The language of humor-the humor of language. Irony and humor in interpersonal verbal encounters. Bucharest Working Papers in Linguistics, (2), 121–131. ---. (2010). Humour and verbal irony in G.B. Shaw’s John Bull’s Other Island. Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Philologica, 2(2), 246-258. Amante, D. (1981). The theory of ironic speech acts. Poetics Today, 2(2), 77-96. Anderson, W. E. (1975). Plot, character, speech, and place in Pride and Prejudice. Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 30(3), 367-382. Archer, D., Aijmer, K., & Wichmann, A. (2012). Pragmatics: An advanced resource book for students. Abingdon, UK: Routledge. Attardo, S. (1994). Linguistic theories of humor. New York: Mouton de Gruyter. ---. (2001). Humor and irony in interaction: From mode adoption to failure of detection. In L. Anolli, R. Ciceri & G. Riva (Eds.), Say not to say: New perspectives on miscommunication (pp. 165-185). Amsterdam: IOS Press. Austen, J. (2003). Pride and prejudice. London: Penguin Books. (Original work published 1813) Austin, J. L. (1979). Performative utterances. Philosophical Papers, 233-252. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ---. (2002). How to do things with words. Beijing: Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press. (Original work published 1962) Babb, H. (1958). Dialogue with feeling: A note on Pride and Prejudice. The Kenyon Review, 20(2), 203-216. Bardon, A. (2005). The philosophy of humor. In M. Charney (Ed.), Comedy: A geographic and historical guide (pp. 1-21). Connecticut: Greenwood Press. Bate, J. (1999). Culture and environment: From Austen to Hardy. New Literary History, 30(3), 541- 560. Beauvoir, S. (1976). The second sex. (H.M. Parshley, Trans. & Ed.) New York: Alfred A. Knopf Publishing. Bochman, S. (2005). Less than ideal husbands and wives: Satiric and serious marriage themes in the works of Jane Austen and Oscar Wilde. (Doctoral Dissertation). City University of New York, United States of America. Booth, W. C. (1974). A rhetoric of irony. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Brown, L. W. (1969). The comic conclusion in Jane Austen’s novels. PMLA, 84(6), 1582-1587. ---. (1973). Jane Austen and the feminist tradition. Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 28(3), 321-338. Brown, G., & Yule, G. (2011). Discourse analysis (9th Reprint). Cambridge: Cambridge University 1
  • 2. Press. (Original work published in 1983). Bryant, G. A. & Fox Tree, J. E. (2002). Recognizing verbal irony in spontaneous speech. Metaphor and Symbol, 17(2), 99-117. Buijzen, M., & Valkenburg, P. M. (2004). Developing a typology of humor in audiovisual media. Media Psychology, 6, 147-167. Butler, J. (1993). Bodies that matter: On the discursive limits of “sex.” New York: Routledge. ---. (1997). The psychic life of power: Theories in subjection. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ---. (2002). Gender trouble: Feminism and the subversion of identity. New York: Routledge, Chapman & Hall, Inc. (Original publication 1990) Cai, Y. H. (2010). Elizabeth’s utterances in Pride and Prejudice—An investigation of gendered differences from the perspective of face theory. English Department. Kristianstad University, Sweden Cameron, D. (2006). Performing gender identity: Young men’s talk and the construction of heterosexual masculinity. In A. Jaworski & N. Coupland (Eds.), The discourse reader (2nd ed., pp. 419-442). London: Routledge. (Original work published 1997) Clark, H. H., & Gerrig, R. J. (1984). On the pretense theory of irony. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 113(1), 121-126. Cook, J. (2005). A pragmatic analysis of irony. Language & Information Society, 6, 18-35. Coulthard, M. (1977). An introduction to discourse analysis. London: Longman. Donovan, J. (1991). Women and the rise of the novel: A Feminist-Marxist theory. Signs, 16(1), 441- 462. Downie, J. (2006). Who says she’s a bourgeois writer? Reconsidering the social and political contexts of Jane Austen’s novels. Eighteenth-Century Studies, 40(1), 69-84. Dynel, M. (2011). Pragmatics and linguistic research into humour. In M. Dynel (Ed.), The pragmatics of humour across discourse domains (pp. 1-18). Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing. ---. (Ed.). (2013). Developments in linguistic humor theory. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing. Feng, Z. X. ( 封宗信). (2008). Fictional narrative as history: Reflection and deflection. Semiotica, 170(1), 187-199. Ferrari, G. (2008). Socratic irony as pretence. Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, 34, 1-33. Fu, R. (付蓉). (2013). Irony in Pride and Prejudice and its rhetoric effect. Overseas English 海外英 语. http://www.cnki.net Gee, J. P. (1999). An introduction to discourse analysis: Theory and method. New York: Routledge. Geisdorfer Feal, R. (2001). Introduction: gender issues, representational practices. Latin American Literary Review, 29(57), 5–9. Geng, L. P. (1999). Dialectical elements in the novels of Jane Austen. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Toronto, Canada. 2
  • 3. Gibbs, R. W., & Colston, H. L. (2001). The risks and rewards of ironic communication. In L. Anolli, R. Ciceri & G. Riva (Eds.), Say not to say: New perspectives on miscommunication (pp. 187-200). Amsterdam: IOS Press. Gilbert, M. A. (1999). Language, words and expressive speech acts. In F. Van Eemeren, R. Grootendorst, J. A. Blair & C. A. Willard (Eds.), Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation (pp. 231-234). Amsterdam: ISSA. Gilroy, A., Lynch, D., Park, Y. M., Rajan, R. S., & Tuite, C. (2002). New millennial Austens. NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction, 36(1), 119-125. Giora, R. (1998). Irony. In J. Blommaert & C. Bulcaen. (Eds.), Handbook of pragmatics 1998 (pp. 1- 21). Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Co. Giora, R., & Fein, O. (1999). Irony: context and salience. Metaphor and Symbol, 14(4), 241–257. Giora, R., Federman, S., Kehat, A., Fein, O., & Sabah, H. (2005). Irony aptness. Humor - International Journal of Humor Research, 18(1), 23–40. Gorman, D. (1999). The use and abuse of speech-act theory in criticism. Poetics Today, 20(1), 93-119. Greenfield, S. (2006). The absent-minded heroine: or, Elizabeth Bennet has a thought. Eighteenth- Century Studies, 39(3), 337-350. Grice, H. (1975). Logic and conversation. In P. Cole & J. Morgan (Eds.), Syntax and semantics: speech acts, Volume 3 (pp. 41-58). New York: Academic Press. Gubar, S. (1975). Sane Jane and the critics: “Professions and falsehoods”. A Forum on Fiction, 8(3), 246-259. Habermann, I. (2003). Staging slander and gender in early modern England. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing. Hall, S. (1992). The west and the rest: Discourse and power. In S. Hall & B. Gieben (Eds.), Formations of modernity (pp. 275-332). Cambridge, UK: Polity Press. Hancher, M. (1977). Beyond a speech-act theory of literary discourse: toward a speech act theory of literary discourse by Mary Louise Pratt. MLN, 92(5), 1081-1098. Holdcroft, D. (1983). Irony as a trope, and irony as discourse. Poetics Today, 4(3), 493-511. Husbands, W. (1954). (Review) Jane Austen: irony as defense and discovery by Marvin Mudrick. The Review of English Studies, 5(19), 305–308. Hussein, J.Q. (2009). Ironic expressions: Echo or relevant inappropriateness? Journal of Anbar University for Language & Literature, Ver. 1, 795-810. Hutchens, E. N. (1960). The identification of irony. ELH, 27(4), 352-363. Hutcheon, L. (1992). The complex functions of irony. Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispanicos, 16(2), 219-234. ---. (1994). Irony’s edge. Abingdon, UK: Taylor & Francis. 3
  • 4. Jiang X. N. (江小楠). (2011). Analysis of irony in Pride and Prejudice. Overseas English 海外英语. http://www.cnki.net. Johnson, C. L. (1989). A “sweet face as white as death”: Jane Austen and the politics of female sensibility. A Forum on Fiction, 22(2), 159-174. Juez, L. A. (1995). Verbal irony and the maxims of Grice's cooperative principle. Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses, 8, 25-30. Kissine, M. (2011). Misleading appearances: Searle on assertion and meaning. Erkenntnis 74(1), 115- 129. ---. (2012). Sentences, utterances, and speech acts. In K. Allan & K. Jaszczolt (Eds.), The Cambridge handbook of pragmatics (pp. 169-190). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. Kotthoff, H. (2003). Responding to irony in different contexts: On cognition in conversation. Journal of Pragmatics, 35, 1387-1411. Krikmann, A. (2006). Contemporary linguistic theories of humour. Folklore: Electronic Journal of Folklore, (33), 27-58. Kumon-Nakamura, S., Glucksberg, S., & Brown, M. (1995). How about another piece of pie: The allusional pretense theory of discourse irony. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 124(1), 3-21. Leech, G. N. (1983). Principles of pragmatics. London, U.K.: Longman. ---. (2008). Language in literature: Style and foregrounding. Harlow: Pearson. Leech, G., & Short, M. (2007). Style in fiction: A linguistic introduction to English fictional prose (2nd ed.). Harlow: Pearson. Lennon, P. (2011). Ludic language: The case of the punning echoic allusion. Brno Studies in English, 37(1), 79-95. Litz, A. W. (1975). Recollecting Jane Austen. Critical Inquiry, 1(3), 669-682. Liu, N. S. (刘乃实). (2005). A graph-theoretic approach to verbal humor. (Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation). Fudan University, China. Liu, S. S. (刘世生). (1997). Outlines of western stylistics. Jinan: Shandong Education Press. Livnat, Z. (2003). On verbal irony and types of echoing. Working Papers in Linguistics 15, 71-81. London: University College London. McCann, C. (1964). Setting and character in Pride and Prejudice. Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 19(1), 65-75. McCarthy, M. (2002). Discourse analysis for language teachers. Shanghai: Shanghai Foreign Language Teaching Press. Published with permission of the Syndicate of the Press of the University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England. McKenzie, L. (1980). Jane Austen, Henry James, and the family romance. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Oklahoma, United States of America. 4
  • 5. Mehta, C. R. & Patel, N. R. (2010). IBM SPSS exact tests. SPSS, Inc. Morgan, S. (1975). Intelligence in ‘Pride and Prejudice’. Modern Philology, 73(1), 54-68. Morini, M. (2009). Jane Austen’s narrative techniques: A stylistic and pragmatic analysis. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing. ---. (2010). The poetics of disengagement: Jane Austen and echoic irony. Language and Literature, (19), 339-356. Morreall, J. (1987). Funny haha, funny strange, and other reactions to incongruity. In J. Morreall (Ed.), The philosophy of laughter and humor (pp. 188-207). Albany: State University of New York Press. ---. (Ed.). (2009). Comic relief: A comprehensive philosophy of humor. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing. Moses, C. (2013). Jane Austen and Elizabeth Bennet: The limits of irony. Persuasions 25, 155-164. Muecke, D. (1980). The compass of irony. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd. (Original work published 1969) Neiman, A. (1991). Ironic schooling: Socrates, pragmatism and the higher learning. Educational Theory, 41(4), 371-384. Newman, K. (1983). Can this marriage be saved: Jane Austen makes sense of an ending. ELH, 50(4), 693-710. Newton, J. L. (1978). “Pride and Prejudice”: Power, fantasy, and subversion in Jane Austen. Feminist Studies, 4(1), 27-42. Norrick, N. (2003). Issues in conversational joking. Journal of Pragmatics, 35, 1333-1359. Nowik, E. K. (2005). Politeness of the impolite: Relevance theory, politeness and banter. In A. Korzeniowska and M. Grzegorzewska (Eds.). Relevance Studies in Poland, Vol. 2, 157-166. Warszawa, Poland: The Institute of English Studies, University of Warsaw. Pexman, P. M., Glenwright, M., Krol, A., & James, T. (2005). An acquired taste: Children’s perceptions of humor and teasing in verbal irony. Discourse Processes, 40(3), 259-288. Phelan, J. (1987). Character, progression, and the mimetic-didactic distinction. Modern Philology, 84(3), 282-299. Polimeni, J., & Reiss, J. P. (2006). The first joke: Exploring the evolutionary origins of humor. Evolutionary Psychology, 4, 347–366. Richards, K. (2003). Qualitative inquiry in TESOL. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Robinson, J.M. (1985). Style and personality in the literary work. The Philosophical Review. 94(2), 227-247. Sadock, J. M. (2004). Speech acts. In L.R. Horn and G. Ward (Eds.), Handbook of pragmatics (pp. 53- 73). Oxford: Blackwell. Saeed, J. (2000). Semantics. Beijing: Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press. 5
  • 6. Schiffrin, D. (2003). Approaches to discourse. Malden: Blackwell. (Original work published 1994) Searle, J. (1975). Indirect speech acts. In Cole, P & Morgan, J (Eds.), Syntax and semantics: Speech acts, Volume 3. (pp. 59-82). New York: Academic Press. ---. (1976). A classification of illocutionary acts. Language in Society, 5(1), 1-23. ---. (1989). How performatives work. Linguistics and Philosophy, 12, 535-558. ---. (2001a). Speech acts: An essay in the philosophy of language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (Original work published 1969) ---. (2001b). Expression and meaning: Studies in the theory of speech acts. Beijing: Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press. (Original work published in 1979) Shaw, V. (1975). Jane Austen’s subdued heroines. Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 30(3), 281-303. Short, M. (1996). Discourse analysis and the analysis of drama. In J. Weber. (Ed.), The stylistics reader (pp. 158-180). London: Hodder Headline Group. Shultz, T. R. (1976). A cognitive-developmental analysis of humor. In A. Chapman and H. C. Foot (Eds.), Humour and laughter: Theory, research and applications (pp. 11-36). London: Transaction Publishers. Simpson, P. (1993). Language, ideology and point of view. Great Britain: Routledge. ---. (2003). On the discourse of satire: Towards a stylistic model of satirical humour. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Co. ---. (2004). Stylistics: A resource book for students. New York: Routledge. ---. (2008). Satirical humour and cultural context: with a note on the curious case of Father Todd Unctuous. In R. Carter & P. Stockwell. (Eds.), The language and literature reader (pp. 187-197). Great Britain: Routledge. Sinex, M. (2002). Echoic irony in Walter Map’s Satire against the Cistercians. Comparative Literature, 54(4), 275-290. Sperber, D., & Wilson, D. (1981). Irony and the use-mention distinction. In P. Cole (Ed.), Radical pragmatics (pp. 295-318). London: Academic Press. ---. (1995). Relevance: Communication and cognition (2nd ed.). Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ---. (1998). Irony and relevance: a reply to Drs Seto, Hamamoto and Yamanashi. In R. Carston & S. Uchida (Eds.), Relevance theory: Applications and implications (pp. 283-293). Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Co. Solska, A. (2005). Linguistically encoded contradictions in understanding verbal irony. In A. Korzeniowska and M. Grzegorzewska (Eds.). Relevance Studies in Poland, Vol. 2, 125-138. Warszawa, Poland: The Institute of English Studies, University of Warsaw. Stanel, T. (2006). Linguistic approaches to irony—An analysis of British newspaper comments. Technische Universität Chemnitz. Strawson, P. (1964). Intention and convention in speech acts. Philosophical Review, 73, 439-460. 6
  • 7. Sullivan, Z. (1991). Theory for the untheoretical: Rereading and reteaching Austen, Bronte, and Conrad. College English, 53(5), 571-579. Suls, J. (1972). A two-stage model for the appreciation of jokes and cartoons: An information- processing analysis. In J. Goldstein & P. McGhee (Eds.), The psychology of humor (pp. 81-100). New York: Academic Press. Swift, J. (2013). A modest proposal for preventing the children of poor people in Ireland from becoming a burden on their parents or country, and for making them beneficial to the publick. In J. Manis (Ed.), A modest proposal and other short pieces including a tale of a tub (pp. 5-12). Electronic Classics Series. Pennsylvania State University. (original work published in 1729). Thornborrow, J. & Wareing, S. (2000). Patterns in language: Stylistics for students of language and literature. Beijing: Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press. (Original publication 1998 London: Taylor & Francis Limited). Toolan, M. J. (1988). Narrative: A critical linguistic introduction. Great Britain: Routledge. Twain, M. (1994). Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. (Dover Thrift Edition). Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, Inc. (original work published 1885). Utsumi, A. (2000). Verbal irony as implicit display of ironic environment: Distinguishing ironic utterances from nonirony. Journal of Pragmatics, 32, 1777-1806. Warning, R. & Morton, M. (1982). Irony and the “order of discourse” in Flaubert. New Literary History, 13(2), 253-286. Wilson, D. (2006). The pragmatics of verbal irony: Echo or pretense? Lingua, 116, 1722-1743. ---. (2009). Irony and metarepresentation. Working Papers in Linguistics, Vol. 21, 183-226. UCLA, California. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/psychlangsci/research/linguistics/publications. Wilson, D. & Sperber, D. (1992). On verbal irony. Lingua, 87, 53-76. ---. (2002). Relevance theory. Working Papers in Linguistics, 14, 249-290. University College London. ---. (2012). Explaining irony. In D. Wilson & D. Sperber (Eds.), Meaning and relevance (pp. 123- 146). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Worthen, W. (1998). Drama, performativity, and performance. PMLA, 113(5), 1093-1107. Wright, A. (1969). The compass of irony by D. C. Muecke. College English, 31(3), 322-326. ---. (1975). Jane Austen adapted. Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 30(3), 421-453. Wu, X. (吴霞). (2009). 中国学生对英语笑话的理解与欣赏. (Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation). Tsinghua University, China. Xia, D. S. ( 夏 登 山 ). (2011). A pragmatic study of communicative responsibilities in triadic communication—With reference to HongLouMeng. (Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation). Tsinghua University, China. Yoshitake, M. (2004). Critique of J. L. Austin’s speech act theory: Decentralization of the speaker- centered meaning in communication. Kyushu Communication Studies, 2, 27-43. 7
  • 8. Zhang, S. J. (张绍杰). (2001). 导读. In J. Searle Expression and meaning: Studies in the theory of speech acts (pp. F22-F35). Beijing: Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press. (Original work published in 1979). Zhao, H. (2010). A relevance-theoretic approach to verbal irony: A case study of ironic utterances in Pride and Prejudice. Journal of Pragmatics (43), 175-182. Zimmerman, E. (1968). Pride and prejudice in Pride and Prejudice. Nineteenth-Century Fiction, 23(1), 64-73. 8