Group
Language, Identities and Institutions Research Group
Unit(s) of assessment: English Language and Literature
Research theme(s): Safety and Sustainability
School: School of Arts and Humanities
Overview
This group brings together researchers who analyse the integral and dynamic role that language plays in the formation, function and preservation of identities and institutions across society. It is part of the Centre for Research in Literature, Linguistics and Culture.
Group members examine language in the construction and projection of individual and group identities across regional, social and digital space. They also critically evaluate language use by and within institutions, in legal, health(care), political, media, educational and cultural contexts. Drawing on approaches and perspectives from Systemic Functional Grammar, (Critical) Discourse Studies, sociolinguistics and corpus linguistics, the group explores issues such as: the language of the law and the legal process; discourses of healthcare advice; representation and ideology in the media; the impact that physical and mental illnesses have on speech and language; language and political power; vocabulary learning, language and identity in the East Midlands and language as heritage.
The group has members from across a range of disciplines within NTU, including linguistics, psychology, politics and international relations, global and sustainable development, computer science, criminology, youth and community studies, film and TV.
Together, members bring inter- and transdisciplinary approaches to the ways in which language and communication can address local, regional and global issues.
Connect with us
Partnerships
Collaborations and external partnerships
Group members have collaborated with colleagues and teams in universities across the UK and the world, including: Aston University, Birmingham City University, Bishop Grosseteste University, De Montfort University, Justus Liebig University Giessen, King's College London , Lancaster University, Lincoln Crown Court, Manchester Metropolitan University, Newman University , Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Northumbria University, Paderborn University , Queen Mary University London, Sheffield Hallam University , Universitat de Barcelona, University College Dublin, University of Cambridge, University of Cambridge, University of Duisburg-Essen , University of Leeds, University of Nottingham, University of Nottingham, University of Oxford, University of Oxford, University of Wolverhampton , University of York, University of York, Utrecht University
External partnerships include:
- Andrew Graves (writer)
- Angolan Women Voice Association
- Big Pit National Coal Museum
- Bilsthorpe Mining Museum
- Bochum Mining Museum (Germany)
- ChalleNGe Nottingham
- Chesterfield Museum
- Derby Theatre
- Derbyshire Record Office
- First Story East Midlands
- Hannah Sawtell (illustrator)
- ICOMOS (International Council on Monuments and Sites)
- Inspire Libraries
- Kidology Arts
- Laboratorio SQ-Lingüistas Forenses
- Lancashire Mining Museum
- Mansfield Museum
- Mine2Minds Education
- Museums Galleries Scotland
- Museums Northumberland
- National Coal Mining Museum for England
- National Mining Museum Scotland
- Nottingham Art Exchange
- Nottingham UNESCO City of Literature
- Pleasley Pit Trust
- QEDforensics
- Reflex Studios
- South Wales Miners Museum
- Visit Nottinghamshire
- Zeche Zollverein (Germany)
Selected Recent Publications
BRABER, N., 2023. Community projects. In: H. PRICE and D. MCINTYRE, eds., Communicating Linguistics: Language, Community and Public Engagement. London: Routledge, pp. 131-142.
COFFEY-GLOVER, L. and HOWARD, V., 2023. ‘At the breast is best?’ A corpus-informed feminist critical discourse analysis of the marginalisation of expressing human milk in online infant feeding promotional discourse. Discourse, Context & Media 55, 100730. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcm.2023.100730
COFFEY-GLOVER, L. and MACKENZIE, J., 2023. 'Balancing family time with fighting villains': gender, agency and social action in the representation of Disney Heroes. Gender and Language, 16 (4), pp. 359-381. https://doi.org/10.1558/genl.21436
ROTHWELL, A., MOORKENS, J., FERNÁNDEZ-PARRA, M., DRUGAN, J. and AUSTERMUEHL, F., 2023. Translation Tools and Technologies. London: Routledge.
BRABER, N., 2022. Lexical Variation of an East Midlands Mining Community. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
BRABER, N., SMITH, H., WRIGHT, D., HARDY, A. and ROBSON, J., 2022. Assessing the specificity and accuracy of accent judgments by lay listeners. Language and Speech, 66 (2), pp. 267-290. https://doi.org/10.1177/00238309221101560
COLTMAN-PATEL, T. and WRIGHT, D., 2022. Sexualising public health in British tabloids: celebrities ‘flaunting’ weight loss during a pandemic. Journal of Language and Discrimination 7(1): 1–25. https://doi.org/10.1558/jld.22670
SMITH, H.M.J., ROESER, J., PAUTZ, N., DAVIS, J.P., ROBSON, J., WRIGHT, D., BRABER, N. and STACEY, P.C., 2022. Evaluating earwitness identification procedures: adapting pre-parade instructions and parade procedure. Memory, 31 (1), pp. 147-161 https://doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2022.2129065
WILLIAMS, J. and WRIGHT, D., 2022. Ambiguity, responsibility and political action in the UK daily COVID-19 briefings. Critical Discourse Studies. https://doi.org/10.1080/17405904.2022.2110132
WRIGHT, D., ROBSON, J., MURRAY-EDWARDS, H. and BRABER, N., 2022. The pragmatic functions of 'respect' in lawyers' courtroom discourse: a case study of Brexit hearings. Journal of Pragmatics, 187, pp. 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pragma.2021.10.028
BRABER, B. and BRABER, N., 2021. From Tangier to Locarno: the experience of war in Nottingham and language use in local newspapers, 1905-1925. Midland History, 46 (3), pp. 318-338. https://doi.org/10.1080/0047729X.2021.1975230
HARDING, R., BETTS, L., WRIGHT, D., PEART, S. and SJÖLIN, C., 2021. Adolescent girls' experiences of street harassment: emotions, comments, impact, actions and the law. In: I. ZEMPI and J. SMITH, eds., Misogyny as hate crime. London: Routledge, 121–139.
JANSEN, S. and BRABER, N., 2021. FOOT-fronting and FOOT–STRUT splitting: vowel variation in the East Midlands. English Language and Linguistics, 25 (4), pp. 767-797. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1360674320000325
LOVE, R. and WRIGHT, D., 2021. Specifying challenges in transcribing covert recordings: implications for forensic transcription. Frontiers in Communication, 6: 797448. https://doi.org/10.3389/fcomm.2021.797448
WRIGHT, D., 2021. Corpus approaches to forensic linguistics. In: M. COULTHARD, A. MAY and R. SOUSA-SILVA, eds., The Routledge Handbook of Forensic Linguistics (2nd edn).London: Routledge, pp. 611-627.
Don't be mardy and listen to Natalie Braber, Professor of Linguistics, talk about the local Nottinghamshire dialect
Research supervision
Members of the Language, Identities and Institutions Research Group supervise doctoral students on topics such as:
- Clinical Linguistics
- Corpus approaches to discourse studies (CADS)
- Critical Discourse Analysis
- Feminist Critical Discourse Analysis
- Forensic and legal linguistics
- Language, discourse and identity
- Linguistic abilities in adults with communication disorders
- Linguistic disadvantage and exclusion in the criminal justice system
- Sociolinguistics and language variation
- The language of politics and politicians
- The language of terrorist manifestos
PhD students
We supervise a number of research students in the group.
News
Group staff
David Wright (Group Lead)
Research interests: forensic and legal linguistics, courtroom discourse, language and discrimination, corpus linguistics, corpus approaches to discourse studies, (critical) discourse analysis
Research interests: translation, translation technology, Interpreter and Translator Education, political discourse analysis, presidential rhetoric
Research interests: accent and dialect, Language in the East Midlands, Pit Talk, Language as Heritage, Accent discrimination, Accent stereotypes, Ear witness testimony, Language and Memory
Research interests: feminist linguistics, (critical) discourse analysis, gender inclusive language, health communication, corpus approaches to discourse studies, discourses of parenthood
Research interests: clinical Linguistics, Aphasia, Systemic Functional Linguistics, Political Discourse Analysis, Functional Grammar
Other group staff
Heather Alberro - History, Heritage and Global Cultures
Pam Alldred -Social Work and Health
Sam Barclay - EFL/TESOL
Ophelie Castellani - Nottingham Institute of Languages and Intercultural Communication
Jay Chester - Social and Political Sciences
Carla Grimley - Nottingham Institute of Languages and Intercultural Communication
Francesca Hardy - Film & TV
Concha Holfer - History, Heritage and Global Cultures
Blerina Kellezi - Psychology
Katerina Krulisova - Social and Political Sciences
Nikolas Pautz - Psychology
Marriana Poberezhskaya - Social and Political Sciences
Sarah Seymour-Smith - Psychology
Harriet Smith - Psychology
Amy Wang - EFL/TESOL
Magdalena Williams - Computer Science
Irene Zempi - Criminology and Criminal Justice
Related projects
Improving Voice Identification Parades (IVIP)
Mapping the Changing Face of Cross-Examination
Accent Discrimination at the Bar
Corpus Approaches to Forensic Linguistics
Language and Museums - the importance of language as intangible heritage
Impact case study
Changing Attitudes to East Midlands English and Raising Awareness of Language as Heritage
Here for the epic thinkers
The School of Arts and Humanities is home to research in Modern Languages and Linguistics; English Language and Literature; History; and Communication, Cultural and Media Studies.
AHRC Midlands4Cities Doctoral Training Partnership scholarships.
Applications are open between October and January each year.