All Stories

  1. “But Then Again, Too Few to Mention”: Negotiating Regret in Israeli and American News Interviews
  2. “These are not just slogans”
  3. Interpretive Constructs in Contrast: The Case of Flattery in Hebrew and in Palestinian Arabic
  4. The pragmatics of amicable interstate communication
  5. Too good to be true: The effect of conciliatory message design on compromising attitudes in intractable conflicts
  6. The politics of being insulted
  7. Communicating Imperfection: The Ethical Principles of News Corrections
  8. News-Media and Terrorism: Changing Relationship, Changing Definitions
  9. Mediated performatives
  10. Transforming Media Coverage of Violent Conflicts
  11. From “There are no Palestinian people” to “Sorry for their suffering”
  12. Blum-Kulka, Shoshana
  13. Chapter 9. When the watchdog bites
  14. “Hello! This is Jerusalem calling”: The revival of spoken Hebrew on the Mandatory radio (1936–1948)
  15. Homullus medius: Transforming the logic of reporting at crisis
  16. Public (non-) apologies: The discourse of minimizing responsibility
  17. The age of apology: evidence from the Israeli public discourse
  18. Performance Journalism: The Case of Media's Coverage of War and Terror
  19. The Changing Relationships Among Media, Government, and Public: The Case of War
  20. Saddam on CBS and Arafat on IBA Interviewing the Enemy on Television
  21. Do children apologize to each other? Apology events in young Israeli peer discourse
  22. Blood on their hands: The story of a photograph in the Israeli national discourse