Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the course of a trial hearing, written documents such as police records of statements made by suspects, witnesses and experts are extensively referred to, quoted, paraphrased, summarized and recontextualized. In fact, such drawing upon the (written documents in) the case file is inevitable, as demonstrating (or invalidating) the defendant’s criminal liability crucially depends on the transformation of discourses produced at previous stages of the trial into lawful evidence. Detailed analyses of the various discursive processes through which intertextual links with the case file are established are thus essential for understanding exactly how tria...
In this article, I analyze the talk between a suspect and a prosecutor during a pretrial hearing wit...
The importance of language in the study of courtroom trials has been comprehensively investigated fr...
We focus on a striking difference between prototypical legal discourse format and a complex multimod...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
In the following discourse analysis, I crisscross the realms of text and talk to follow the microfor...
In this article we analyze how prosecutors, lawyers and judges refer to the case file. Because witne...
The pupose is to study stories about crime, mythopoesis, via the modalities of speech, text and imag...
This article investigates how the institutionality of interaction is discursively accounted for in a...
Trial proceeding transcripts represent a rapidly expanding area of research within legal communicati...
The leading questions from which the present study originates could be summarised as follows: How do...
The structure and practices of justice systems in many parts of the world are undergoing what can be...
The structure and practices of justice systems in many parts of the world are undergoing what can be...
In this article I conduct an examination of discursive identity of a legal ‘object’ in the course of...
Court discourse is a typical institutional discourse, recently arousing scholars' interest. Systemi...
Law is all about human life, yet struggles to keep life at bay. This is especially true of the crimi...
In this article, I analyze the talk between a suspect and a prosecutor during a pretrial hearing wit...
The importance of language in the study of courtroom trials has been comprehensively investigated fr...
We focus on a striking difference between prototypical legal discourse format and a complex multimod...
Criminal trial hearings are communicative events that are densely intertextually structured. In the ...
In the following discourse analysis, I crisscross the realms of text and talk to follow the microfor...
In this article we analyze how prosecutors, lawyers and judges refer to the case file. Because witne...
The pupose is to study stories about crime, mythopoesis, via the modalities of speech, text and imag...
This article investigates how the institutionality of interaction is discursively accounted for in a...
Trial proceeding transcripts represent a rapidly expanding area of research within legal communicati...
The leading questions from which the present study originates could be summarised as follows: How do...
The structure and practices of justice systems in many parts of the world are undergoing what can be...
The structure and practices of justice systems in many parts of the world are undergoing what can be...
In this article I conduct an examination of discursive identity of a legal ‘object’ in the course of...
Court discourse is a typical institutional discourse, recently arousing scholars' interest. Systemi...
Law is all about human life, yet struggles to keep life at bay. This is especially true of the crimi...
In this article, I analyze the talk between a suspect and a prosecutor during a pretrial hearing wit...
The importance of language in the study of courtroom trials has been comprehensively investigated fr...
We focus on a striking difference between prototypical legal discourse format and a complex multimod...