Astrid Ensslin

List of John Benjamins publications for which Astrid Ensslin plays a role.

Articles

Bom, Isabelle van der, Lyle Skains, Alice Bell and Astrid Ensslin 2021 Chapter 7. Reading hyperlinks in hypertext fiction: An Empirical ApproachStyle and Reader Response: Minds, media, methods, Bell, Alice, Sam Browse, Alison Gibbons and David Peplow (eds.), pp. 123–142 | Chapter
Villanueva, Emily and Astrid Ensslin 2021 Divine intervention: Multimodal pragmatics and unconventional opposition in performed character speech in Dragon Age: InquisitionPragmatics of Accents, Planchenault, Gaëlle and Livia Poljak (eds.), pp. 205–228 | Chapter
Videogames often take place in fictional worlds, yet the performed accents of game characters are real reflections of the language ideologies of a game’s creators and intended audience. This chapter demonstrates how these ideologies are at play in BioWare’s fantasy role-playing game Dragon Age:… read more
Jaworska, Sylvia, Cedric Krummes and Astrid Ensslin 2015 Formulaic sequences in native and non-native argumentative writing in GermanInternational Journal of Corpus Linguistics 20:4, pp. 500–525 | Article
The aim of this paper is to contribute to learner corpus research into formulaic language in native and non-native German. To this effect, a corpus of argumentative essays written by advanced British students of German (WHiG) was compared with a corpus of argumentative essays written by German… read more
Ensslin, Astrid 2013 “What an un-wiki way of doing things”: Wikipedia’s multilingual policy and metalinguistic practiceThematising Multilingualism in the Media, Kelly-Holmes, Helen and Tommaso M. Milani (eds.), pp. 67–93 | Article
Wikipedia defines itself as “the biggest multilingual free-content encyclopedia on the internet”, thus featuring an explicit language policy in its mission statement. Bearing in mind that the site has become the most popular source of encyclopaedic information online, its significance for public… read more
Ensslin, Astrid 2011 “What an un-wiki way of doing things”: Wikipedia’s multilingual policy and metalinguistic practiceThematising Multilingualism in the Media, Kelly-Holmes, Helen and Tommaso M. Milani (eds.), pp. 535–561 | Article
Wikipedia defines itself as “the biggest multilingual free-content encyclopedia on the internet”, thus featuring an explicit language policy in its mission statement. Bearing in mind that the site has become the most popular source of encyclopaedic information online, its significance for public… read more