Young Scholars' Developments in Linguistics: Tradition and Change

Young researchers, natural advocates of change, often delve freely into language processes, their causes, mechanisms and interrelations with social changes. However, any change is based on tradition and cannot exist without it, whether we speak of traditions in terminology, approach, data or method. This volume brings together young scholars from Russia, Poland, Spain, Pakistan, Thailand and Ukraine, and is based on papers presented at the Second International Young Scholars Conference, titled “Lexicon, Discourse and Speaker Studies”, held in Ulyanovsk, Russia, in 2014. It showcases current research into linguistic tradition and change in a variety of contexts across the globe, and is divided into four sections, each of which embraces one specific sphere of language studies. About half of the papers included in the volume are written by Russian authors, and in this respect the volume represents a concise collage of linguistic research in the country, shedding light on some major trends of research and demonstrating explicitly that Russian linguistics is not developing in isolation from other cultural contexts. This book will be of particular interest to researchers, postgraduate students and advanced undergraduates working in the fields of discourse analysis, linguistics, and language acquisition.


Tatiana Dubrovskaya is Head of the English Language Department at Penza State University, Russia, and is a habilitated doctor in Language Theory. She has published in the areas of linguistic pragmatics and discourse analysis, courtroom communication, political and media discourse, cross-cultural communication, and speech genres. Her recent publications include “Judicial power in Russian print media: strategies of representation” in Discourse and Communication (2015) and the Russian-language monographs Speech genres of condemnation and accusation in Russian and English speech cultures (Penza, 2014) and Courtroom discourse: judicial speech behavior (based on Russian and English data) (Moscow, 2010). She is a member of the Russian Communication Association, the International Society for the Study of Argumentation, and the International Language and Law Association.

Yulia Lobina received a PhD in Language Theory from Ulyanovsk State University, Russia. She is Associate Professor at the English Language Department of Ulyanovsk State Pedagogical University, and teaches courses in introductory linguistics, sociolinguistics, and cross-cultural studies. Her current research focuses on academic discourse.

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ISBN: 1-4438-8265-8

ISBN13: 978-1-4438-8265-1

Release Date: 9th November 2015

Pages: 185

Price: £41.99

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