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Ulrike Hanna Meinhof

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ulrike Hanna Meinhof is an Emeritus Professor in the Department of Modern Languages at the University of Southampton in Hampshire.[1] She previously worked as a professor and Chair of Cultural Studies at the University of Bradford in West Yorkshire.[2] She is a specialist in discourse analysis. Her main areas of research involve ethnographic research in European border communities and a comparative media-project about the 20th century on television.

Meinhof is the author of Language Learning in the Age of Satellite Television, published by Oxford University Press.[2]

Works

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  • Text, Discourse and Context: Representation of Poverty in Britain. (with K. Richardson, eds.), London & New York: Longman, 1994
  • Télé-textes (with Elspeth Broady) (1995)[3]
  • Language and Masculinity (with S. Johnson, eds.) Oxford: Blackwell, 1997[4]
  • Language Learning in the Age of Satellite Television. Oxford University Press, 1998
  • Worlds in Common? Satellite discourse in a changing Europe (with Kay Richardson), London & New York: Routledge, 1999
  • English in a Changing World (with David Graddol) (1999)[5]
  • Intertextuality and the Media: from Genre to Everyday life (with Jonathan M. Smith, eds.) Manchester and New York: Manchester University Press, 2000)[3]
  • Africa and Applied Linguistics (editor) (2003)[6]
  • Transcultural Europe: Cultural Policy in a Changing Europe (editor) (2006)[3]
  • Worlds in Common?: Television Discourses in a Changing Europe (with Kay Richardson) (2005)[3]
  • Cultural Globalization and Music: African Artists in Transnational Networks (with Nadia Kiwan) (2011)[7]
  • Negotiating Multicultural Europe: Borders, Networks, Neighbourhoods (editor) (2011)[3]
  • Living (with) Borders: Identity Discourses on East-West Borders in Europe (Routledge Revivals) (editor) (2018)[5]

References

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