Presentations and Publications

Publications

Schneider, Ulrike. 2021. How Trump tweets. A comparative analysis of Tweets by US politicians.Research in Corpus Linguistics 9(2): 34–63. Link

Schneider, Ulrike and Matthias Eitelmann (eds.). 2020. Linguistic Inquiries into Donald Trump’s Language. From ‘Fake News’ to ‘Tremendous Success’. London/New York: Bloomsbury. Link

Reviews of this book:
Linguist List 2021 by Peter Backhaus
Journal of Pragmatics 2021 by Isobelle Clarke
Journal of Language and Politics 2021 by Adam Hodges
Discourse Studies 2021 by Tamsin Parnell
Pragmatics and Society 2022 by Nelly Tincheva

Schneider, Ulrike and Matthias Eitelmann. 2020. Great movement versus crooked opponents. Is Donald Trump’s language populist? In Schneider, Ulrike and Matthias Eitelmann (eds.), Linguistic Inquiries into Donald Trump’s Language. From ‘Fake News’ to ‘Tremendous Success’, 235–250. London/New York: Bloomsbury.

Schneider, Ulrike and Kristene K. McClure. 2020. I’m doing great with the Hispanics. Nobody knows it. The distancing effect of Donald Trump’s the-plurals. In Schneider, Ulrike and Matthias Eitelmann (eds.), Linguistic Inquiries into Donald Trump’s Language. From ‘Fake News’ to ‘Tremendous Success’. 130–152. London/New York: Bloomsbury.

Presentations

Schneider, Ulrike. 2019. The Age of Twitter. An Analysis of American Political Twitter with a Special Focus on the President. Guest Lecture, University of Augsburg. May 8.

Schneider, Ulrike; Eitelmann, Matthias and Britta Mondorf. 2018. Trumpish – The New Language of Populism? A Corpus-Based Exploration of Donald Trump’s Idiolectal Language Use and Political Discourse. LAUD/CLIC, Landau, July 23–26.

Schneider, Ulrike; Eitelmann, Matthias and Britta Mondorf. 2018. Zooming in on Trumpish. A Corpus-based Analysis of Donald Trump’s Idiolectal Language Use in the Social Media. ICAME 39, Tampere, May 30–June 3.

Schneider, Ulrike. 2018. How Trump Tweets. A Comparative Analysis of Tweets by US Politicians. Guest Lecture, University of Brighton. May 2.