Title of Special Issue: Situational Context in Register Studies

Call for papers

Situation of language use has been at the forefront of register studies. 
Register research in text-linguistics has documented systematic situational 
variation and its relationship to functional language use across culturally 
recognized register categories, among texts within register categories, and 
across hybrid registers (e.g., Biber, 1988; Biber & Egbert, 2018; Biber, 
Egbert, Keller, 2020). Situations of language use have also been explored by a 
variety of other research traditions (and referred to as ‘register,’ 
‘communicative situation,’ ‘speech situation,’ ‘social situation, ’or 
‘situational context’). For example, the contribution of the situation of 
language use to explaining linguistic variation is examined alongside 
linguistic variables in variationist linguistics (e.g., Szmrecsanyi , 2019). In 
computational research, it has served as the basis for text classification 
(e.g., Argamon, 2019). The effect of situations of use on individual language 
use is being recognized in stylistics and stylometry (e.g., Marko, Reitbauer & 
Pickl, 2022). Additionally, some situational variables, such as the audience 
and their relative status to the addressor, have been central to 
sociolinguistic research (e.g., Rickford & McNair-Knox, 1994) and discourse 
analysis (e.g., Lorson et al., 2023).

To synthesize the variety of perspectives, approaches, and conceptualizations, 
Register Studies invites proposals that elevate the role of situational context 
in linguistic research. We welcome a wide range of empirical, methodological, 
or theoretical papers under this scope. Papers for this special issue should 
highlight situational context and its integration into register studies.

Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

Applications of situational analysis to corpus design and evaluation
Analysis of situational variation across and within registers
Detailed analyses of communicative events and their communicative strategies 
(e.g., conflict, celebration, social gathering, etc.)
Descriptions of frameworks for situational analysis
Approaches to coding for situational characteristics
Generality and specificity of situational parameters
Situation in applied research (e.g., pedagogy, medical discourse, legal 
discourse, etc.)
The psycholinguistic reality of situational distinctions
Interaction of the situation of language use with other predictor variables 
(e.g., social status, gender) 
New, unaccounted for (configurations of) situational parameters and/or 
novel/nonstandard situations of language use
Cross-cultural situational differences and/or situations unique to particular 
linguistic communities
Situation of language use and discourse-pragmatic variation
Situation of technology-mediated interactions

Important Dates

Deadline for proposals:                        April 15, 2024            
Invitations to submit a manuscript:     May 1, 2024
Initial manuscripts due:                        October 1, 2024
Notification of review outcome:           December 1, 2024
Final manuscripts due:                          February 28, 2025
Special issue publication:                      7:2 - Fall 2025

Proposal Format & Submission

Submit a one-page abstract for your proposed article to Associate Editors 
Larissa Goulart and Marianna Gracheva at [email protected]. Please 
include your full contact information and a draft title. For empirical studies, 
the abstract should introduce the topic and motivate the study, summarize the 
methodological approach, describe the data to be analyzed, and summarize 
preliminary results. Abstracts for theoretical and methodological articles 
should introduce and motivate the issue to be addressed, and explain the main 
premises that will be included in the article. Please follow the style guide 
for Register Studies (available at the journal website: 
https://benjamins.com/catalog/rs).

Peer Review
All manuscripts will undergo double-blind peer review following the journal’s 
standard process.

References:

Biber, D.  1988.  Variation across speech and writing. Cambridge University 
Press. 
Biber, D., & Egbert, J. (2018). Register variation online. Cambridge University 
Press.
Biber, D., Egbert, J., & Keller, D. (2020). Reconceptualizing register in a 
continuous situational space. Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory, 16(3), 
581–616.
Argamon, S. (2019). Computational register analysis and synthesis. Computation 
and Language. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.1901.02543 
Lorson, A., Rhode, H., & Cummins, C. (2023). Epistemicity and communicative 
strategies. Discourse Processes, 60(8), 556–593.
Marko, K., Reitbauer, M., & Pickl, G. (2022). Same person, different platform. 
Challenges and implications for forensic authorship analysis. An exploratory 
study of Instagram and Twitter users. Register Studies, 4(2), 202–231. 
Rickford, J. R. & McNair-Knox, F. (1994). Addressee- and topic-influenced style 
shift: a quantitative sociolinguistic study. In D. Biber & E. Finegan (Eds.), 
Sociolinguistic perspectives on register (pp. 235–276). Oxford University Press.
Szmrecsanyi, B. (2019). Register in variationist linguistics. Register Studies, 
1(1), 76–99.
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