Lauri Haapanen

List of John Benjamins publications in which Lauri Haapanen is involved.

Title

Cover not available

Linguistic Recycling: The process of quoting in increasingly mediatized settings

Edited by Lauri Haapanen and Daniel Perrin

“She said that he said that they said…” – in this volume of the AILA Review, we investigate linguistic recycling from complementary angles. In particular, we discuss how and for whom language users – both as individuals and as communities – save resources and create value by quoting and… read more
[AILA Review, 33] 2020. iv, 225 pp.
Cover not available
This paper shows that journalists are gradually taking greater advantage of social media and the interactional affordances it offers. This means, firstly, that journalists can benefit from social media not only by monitoring conversations, but also by participating in and initiating them.… read more
Cover not available
Haapanen, Lauri and Daniel Perrin 2020 Linguistic recycling: The process of quoting in increasingly mediatized settingsLinguistic Recycling: The process of quoting in increasingly mediatized settings, Haapanen, Lauri and Daniel Perrin (eds.), pp. 1–20 | Introduction
Cover not available
Haapanen, Lauri and Leo Leppänen 2020 Recycling a genre for news automation: The production of Valtteri the Election BotLinguistic Recycling: The process of quoting in increasingly mediatized settings, Haapanen, Lauri and Daniel Perrin (eds.), pp. 67–85 | Article
The amount of available digital data is increasing at a tremendous rate. These data, however, are of limited use unless converted into a user-friendly form. We took on this task and built a natural language generation (NLG) driven system that generates journalistic news stories about elections… read more
Cover not available
Haapanen, Lauri and Daniel Perrin 2019 Chapter 1. Translingual quoting in journalism: Behind the scenes of Swiss television newsroomsJournalism and Translation in the Era of Convergence, Davier, Lucile and Kyle Conway (eds.), pp. 15–42 | Chapter
This chapter focuses on translingual quoting (TQ), i.e. the sub-process of news-writing by which utterances from sources are both quoted and translated. Analyses of journalists’ mental and material activities suggest conceptualizing TQ as a complex and dynamic activity in which journalists’… read more
Mobile Menu Logo with link to supplementary files background Layer 1 prag Twitter_Logo_Blue