In the following discourse analysis, I crisscross the realms of text and talk to follow the microformation of legal discourse. How, I ask, does a barrister put together the case for a Crown Court hearing? This representational project, I argue, involves assorted artefacts (marks, modules, maps, or lists) that are consulted as resources on succeeding stages. The various sites of the microformation are the brief, the barrister's note book, and some confidential and staged speech events. The offered trans-sequential analysis of legal discourse puts into perspective preparation and performance, file work and speech production, procedural history, and the field of presence. I explore, above all, the unknown region in between judicial talk and te...
The article analyses the role of the addressee as a factor determining discourses of legal professio...
Rhetorical scholars have long advocated for the study of legal discourse because of the “centrality ...
The leading questions from which the present study originates could be summarised as follows: How do...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
The author explores materialities as pre-established and co-producing features of criminal proceedin...
Inside the offices, paper-workers produce and combine documents. Their desks are covered with paper:...
In this article we analyze how prosecutors, lawyers and judges refer to the case file. Because witne...
We focus on a striking difference between prototypical legal discourse format and a complex multimod...
The article deals with a fundamental mechanism here referred to as 'discoursivation' meaning the tra...
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing...
In this paper, I concentrate on court cases with litigants in person (lay people who act on their ow...
In this article I conduct an examination of discursive identity of a legal ‘object’ in the course of...
In an age of managerialism and professionalization, trial by jury might appear costly, inefficient a...
This paper explores crime reports on verdicts and sentences in child/teenager murder cases in the Br...
The article aims to contribute a genre-based description of the realisation of Concession in EU judi...
The article analyses the role of the addressee as a factor determining discourses of legal professio...
Rhetorical scholars have long advocated for the study of legal discourse because of the “centrality ...
The leading questions from which the present study originates could be summarised as follows: How do...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
The author explores materialities as pre-established and co-producing features of criminal proceedin...
Inside the offices, paper-workers produce and combine documents. Their desks are covered with paper:...
In this article we analyze how prosecutors, lawyers and judges refer to the case file. Because witne...
We focus on a striking difference between prototypical legal discourse format and a complex multimod...
The article deals with a fundamental mechanism here referred to as 'discoursivation' meaning the tra...
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing...
In this paper, I concentrate on court cases with litigants in person (lay people who act on their ow...
In this article I conduct an examination of discursive identity of a legal ‘object’ in the course of...
In an age of managerialism and professionalization, trial by jury might appear costly, inefficient a...
This paper explores crime reports on verdicts and sentences in child/teenager murder cases in the Br...
The article aims to contribute a genre-based description of the realisation of Concession in EU judi...
The article analyses the role of the addressee as a factor determining discourses of legal professio...
Rhetorical scholars have long advocated for the study of legal discourse because of the “centrality ...
The leading questions from which the present study originates could be summarised as follows: How do...