Agnieszka Piskorska
List of John Benjamins publications in which Agnieszka Piskorska is involved.
Journal
Titles
Concepts and Context in Relevance-Theoretic Pragmatics: New Developments
Edited by Agnieszka Piskorska and Manuel Padilla Cruz
New Developments in Relevance Theory
Edited by Manuel Padilla Cruz and Agnieszka Piskorska
Special issue of Pragmatics & Cognition 28:2 (2021) v, 218 pp.
Relevance Theory, Figuration, and Continuity in Pragmatics
Edited by Agnieszka Piskorska
The chapters in this volume apply the methodology of relevance theory to develop accounts of various pragmatic phenomena which can be associated with the broadly conceived notion of style. Some of them are devoted to central cases of figurative language (metaphor, metonymy, puns, irony) while… read more[Figurative Thought and Language, 8] 2020. vii, 357 pp.
2026 Animal personas, ambivalent judgements, and affective effects in social media reels Internet Pragmatics: Online-First Articles | Article
This paper discusses humorous internet reels featuring cute animals voicing critical opinions about human behaviours and lifestyles. The reels are characterised by incongruity between the images of animals and the content of their messages. An analysis of lexical items and pragmatic implications… read more
2023 Has madam read Wilson (2016)? A procedural account of the T/V forms in Polish Concepts and Context in Relevance-Theoretic Pragmatics: New Developments, Piskorska, Agnieszka and Manuel Padilla Cruz (eds.), pp. 486–504 | Article
This paper offers an account of Polish addressative forms encoding deference and familiarity in terms of the relevance-theoretic notion of procedural meaning, which underlies a heterogeneous range of phenomena linked to different cognitive domains. The procedure encoded by pronouns used… read more
2023 Concepts and context in relevance-theoretic pragmatics: New developments Concepts and Context in Relevance-Theoretic Pragmatics: New Developments, Piskorska, Agnieszka and Manuel Padilla Cruz (eds.), pp. 313–323 | Article
2021 New developments in relevance theory New Developments in Relevance Theory, Padilla Cruz, Manuel and Agnieszka Piskorska (eds.), pp. 223–227 | Introduction
2021 The internet and social media as a theme and channel of humor Pragmatics, Humour and the Internet, Yus, Francisco (ed.), pp. 12–27 | Article
This paper deploys the tools of relevance theory to establish a common pragmatic mechanism operating in humorous texts (stand-up comedy, jokes, sketches) themed on the omnipresence of the Internet and social media in human life. It is postulated that this mechanism resides in incongruity between… read more
2021 Humorous means, serious messages: A relevance-theoretic perspective on telling jokes to communicate propositional meaning Beyond Meaning, Ifantidou, Elly, Louis de Saussure and Tim Wharton (eds.), pp. 119–132 | Chapter
Drawing on the observation that speakers may use jokes as stylistic devices to communicate propositional meanings, this paper offers a relevance-theoretic account of pragmatic mechanisms involved in this kind of communication, dubbed ‘meaningful jokes.’ First, I argue that the comprehension of… read more
2021 Being ambivalent by exploiting indeterminacy in the explicit import of an utterance New Developments in Relevance Theory, Padilla Cruz, Manuel and Agnieszka Piskorska (eds.), pp. 376–393 | Article
In line with recent interest in weak and often not fully determinate effects of communication permeating relevance-theoretic research, I contribute a discussion on two possible sources of speaker-intended indeterminacy within explicit import of an utterance: one residing in an intentionally… read more
2020 Chapter 2. Metonymic relations – from determinacy to indeterminacy Relevance Theory, Figuration, and Continuity in Pragmatics, Piskorska, Agnieszka (ed.), pp. 45–65 | Chapter
The chapter offers an account of metonymy and discusses some stylistic effects which may be provided by metonymic expressions. We treat metonymically communicated concepts as part of the inferentially established proposition of an utterance and argue that many such concepts may be indeterminate.… read more
2020 Introduction: The literal-figurative language continuum and optimally relevant interpretations Relevance Theory, Figuration, and Continuity in Pragmatics, Piskorska, Agnieszka (ed.), pp. 1–22 | Chapter
2016 Perlocutionary effects and relevance theory Relevance Theory: Recent developments, current challenges and future directions, Padilla Cruz, Manuel (ed.), pp. 287–305 | Article
The paper adopts and modifies Austin’s (1962) notion of perlocutionary effects and argues for recognizing the significance of such effects in communication. I draw a parallel between persuasion, which has received much attention in RT and is believed to be intrinsically linked to comprehension, and… read more







