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School of Humanities: Recent submissions

    • Climate change advocates and deniers? Triangulating methods to investigate the language of left- and right-leaning Twitter users 

      McCarthy, Darcy
      Published 2023-01-19
      This thesis examines left- and right- leaning users on Australian Twitter in an effort to understand the language use of the different parties to online climate change discourse. The data are taken from Australian Twitter ...
      Open Access
      Thesis
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    • COVID-19 and Well-Being of Non-local Students: Implications for International Higher Education Governance 

      Amoah, Padmore Adusei; Mok, Esther Wing Chit
      Published 2022
      Non-local students have been one of the worst affected groups during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many of them live in foreign countries/regions with limited social and economic support. This study examines the effects of the ...
      Article
      View
    • ‘Trump at the Gates of Democracy’: A corpus-based Critical Discourse Analysis of news reporting on the January 6th Event in the Australian and the Sydney Morning Herald 

      Lo Schiavo-Rega, Raphael
      Published 2022-06-22
      A corpus-based Critical Discourse Analysis of news reporting on the January 6th Event (also known as the '2021 United States Capitol attack') in the two Australian broadsheet newspapers The Australian and The Sydney Morning Herald
      Open Access
      Thesis
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    • Emotional labor in webcare and beyond: A linguistic framework and case study 

      Fuoli, Matteo; Bednarek, Monika
      Published 2022
      This article presents a novel framework for examining how emotional labor is performed linguistically. Bringing together Arlie Hochschild's pioneering sociological work and insights from the linguistic literature on emotion, ...
      Article
      View
    • Instagram as a tool for archaeological science communication 

      Caspari, Gino
      Published 2022
      With the accelerated growth the social media platform Instagram has seen over the course of the Covid-19 pandemic its potential as a tool for communicating archaeological science is becoming ever more apparent. The platforms' ...
      Article
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