Baker and McEnery (2017) wanted to find out what the public representation of gay men was in the 1700’s. Of course they weren’t called “gay men” back then and there was a…
Based on The public representation of homosexual men in seventeenth- century England- a corpus based view by Helen Baker and Tony McEnery …
Years ago at a New Year’s drag show, the queen hosting the event said of me and a couple friends, “Look at these trashy whores from Virginia!” as we took some…
(This is the second post in the series “Dismantling the Native-speakerarchy.” Check out the first post here.) It’s time to pull another Jenga block out of the Native-speakerarchy tower. That block…
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how identity is something that we perform. I was introduced to this idea through my exploration of the Iggy Azalea’s persona and performance for…
Emojis are cool, right? Well typing that sure didn’t feel cool, but whatever. The paper “Are Emojis Predictable?” by Francesco Barbieri, Miguel Ballesteros, Horacio Saggion explores the relationships between words and emojis by…
Welcome to the companion to Are Emojis Predictable? by Francesco Barbieri, Migual Ballesteros, and Horacio Saggion. This is where I’ve attempted to provide some semblance of explanation for the methods of…
Those silly Brexiting kweens across the pond are making headlines (por ejemplo) about implementing an English language requirement deadline for UK residents. While we wait for that sitch to shake out,…
In this paper Dr. Eberhardt (2017) looks at the way gender is represented in the Harry Potter series (the books) by comparing the verbs used to report the speech of Harry’s…
Why A movement has been brewing in the English language teaching field to raise awareness about the discrimination against ‘non-native speaker teachers’ and the privilege of ‘native speaker teachers.’ (The labels…