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Etudes contrastives / Contrastive Studies
Description, appropriation et traduction des langues et des cultures / Description, appropriation and translation of languages and culturesISSN: 1424-3563
The Contrastive Studies publishes academic works in French and English dealing with languages which are highly diverse in their usage, contributing new insights on phenomena such as equivalence, interference, and non-correspondence. Offering a window onto translation as a type of language contact, the book series also includes studies on the process of appropriation of both languages and cultures in a wide variety of contexts. Marc Brunelle, University of Ottawa, Canada Jean-Marc Dewaele, Birbeck College, United Kingdom Jean-René Ladmiral, Université Paris X - Nanterre, France Daniel Lebaud, Université de Franche-Comté, France Jean-Léo Léonard, Université Paris-Sorbonne, France Roland Marti, Universität des Saarlandes, Deutschland Antonio Pamies Bertrán, Universidad de Granada, España Mojca Schlamberger Brezar, Univerza v Ljubljani, Slovenia La collection Etudes contrastives propose des travaux en français et anglais qui apportent des éclairages inédits sur des phénomènes d'équivalence, d'interférence ou de non-coïncidence, confrontant les langues les plus diverses dans leurs usages multiples. Offrant une ouverture sur la traduction en tant que contact de langues, elle accueille également des études portant sur le processus d’appropriation des langues et des cultures dans les contextes les plus variés. Marc Brunelle, University of Ottawa, Canada Jean-Marc Dewaele, Birbeck College, United Kingdom Jean-René Ladmiral, Université Paris X - Nanterre, France Daniel Lebaud, Université de Franche-Comté, France Jean-Léo Léonard, Université Paris-Sorbonne, France Roland Marti, Universität des Saarlandes, Deutschland Antonio Pamies Bertrán, Universidad de Granada, España Mojca Schlamberger Brezar, Univerza v Ljubljani, Slovenia
23 publications
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Contemporary Studies in Descriptive Linguistics
This series provides an outlet for academic monographs which offer a recent and original contribution to linguistics and which are within the descriptive tradition. While the monographs demonstrate their debt to contemporary linguistic thought, the series does not impose limitations in terms of methodology or genre, and does not support a particular linguistic school. Rather the series welcomes new and innovative research that contributes to furthering the understanding of the description of language. The topics of the monographs are scholarly and represent the cutting edge for their particular fields, but are also accessible to researchers outside the specific disciplines. Contemporary Studies in Descriptive Linguistics is based at the School of English, University of St Andrews. The Literary and Cultural Stylistics subseries aims to explore the intersection of descriptive linguistics with the disciplines of literature and culture. The techniques of stylistic analysis offer a way of approaching texts both literary and non-literary as well as all forms of cultural communication. The subseries offers a home for this research, where literary criticism meets linguistics and where cultural studies meets communication. It welcomes a wide range of data sets and methodologies, with the intention that every book in the subseries makes a new contribution to the disciplines that support them.
65 publications
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Contemporary Studies in Descriptive Linguistics: Literary and Cultural Stylistics
This series provides an outlet for academic monographs which offer a recent and original contribution to linguistics and which are within the descriptive tradition. While the monographs demonstrate their debt to contemporary linguistic thought, the series does not impose limitations in terms of methodology or genre, and does not support a particular linguistic school. Rather the series welcomes new and innovative research that contributes to furthering the understanding of the description of language. The topics of the monographs are scholarly and represent the cutting edge for their particular fields, but are also accessible to researchers outside the specific disciplines. Contemporary Studies in Descriptive Linguistics is based at the Department of English, University of Buckingham. The Literary and Cultural Stylistics subseries aims to explore the intersection of descriptive linguistics with the disciplines of literature and culture. The techniques of stylistic analysis offer a way of approaching texts both literary and non-literary as well as all forms of cultural communication. The subseries offers a home for this research, where literary criticism meets linguistics and where cultural studies meets communication. It welcomes a wide range of data sets and methodologies, with the intention that every book in the subseries makes a new contribution to the disciplines that support them.
0 publications
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Ekphrastic Conceptualism in Postmodern British and American Novels
Don DeLillo, Paul Auster and Tom McCarthy©2015 Monographs -
Translating Audio Description Scripts
Translation as a New Strategy of Creating Audio Description©2015 Monographs -
Questions de classification en linguistique: méthodes et descriptions
Mélanges offerts au Professeur Christian Molinier©2005 Others -
Dynamic Linguistics
Labov, Martinet, Jakobson and other Precursors of the Dynamic Approach to Language Description©2013 Monographs -
Pluricentric Languages: New Perspectives in Theory and Description
©2015 Conference proceedings -
Négociations commerciales et objectifs spécifiques
De la description à l’enseignement des interactions orales professionnelles©2006 Monographs -
Formal Description of Slavic Languages: The Ninth Conference
Proceedings of FDSL 9, Göttingen 2011©2013 Conference proceedings -
Le déterminant démonstratif en français et en néerlandais
Théorie, description, acquisition©2012 Thesis -
Linguistics Investigations into Formal Description of Slavic Languages
Contributions of the Sixth European Conference held at Potsdam University, November 30-December 02, 2005©2007 Edited Collection -
Fieldnotes and Sketchbooks
Challenging the Boundaries Between Descriptions and Processes of Describing©2009 Conference proceedings