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Articles

The Russians are Laughing! The Russians are Laughing! How Russian Diplomats Employ Humour in Online Public Diplomacy

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Read on this site (3)

Pablo Moral. (2023) A tale of heroes and villains: Russia’s strategic narratives on Twitter during the COVID-19 pandemic. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 0:0, pages 1-20.
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Articles from other publishers (10)

Yenal GÖKSUN. (2023) Dijital Diplomasinin Değişen Dili: Rusya’nın Skripal Vakasında Twitter Diplomasisi Kullanımı Örneği. RumeliDE Dil ve Edebiyat Araştırmaları Dergisi:36, pages 825-841.
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Tal Samuel-Azran & Ilan Manor. (2022) Empirical support for the Al-Jazeera Effect notion: Al-Jazeera's Twitter following. International Communication Gazette 85:5, pages 386-411.
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Alina Dolea. (2022) The invisible luggage of the displaced: emotions, trauma and public diplomacy. Place Branding and Public Diplomacy 19:2, pages 242-247.
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Ilan Manor. (2022) The road not taken: why digital diplomacy must broaden its horizons. Place Branding and Public Diplomacy 19:2, pages 206-210.
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Bageshree Ramdas Bageshwar & Shahila Zafar. (2023) Beyond laughter and smiles. The European Journal of Humour Research 11:1, pages 95-116.
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Andrés Mendiburo-Seguel, Hannah Buie, Stéphanie Alenda & Patricio Navia. (2023) A leader or a comedian? Perceptions of politicians based on their use of humor on Twitter. HUMOR 36:1, pages 25-49.
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Eric Van Rythoven. (2022) Backstage Mockery: Impoliteness and Asymmetry on the World Stage. Global Studies Quarterly 2:4.
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Damien Spry & Kerrilee Lockyer. (2021) Large data and small stories: A triangulation approach to evaluating digital diplomacy. Place Branding and Public Diplomacy 18:3, pages 272-286.
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Renée Marlin-Bennett & Susan T Jackson. (2022) DIY Cruelty: The Global Political Micro-Practices of Hateful Memes. Global Studies Quarterly 2:2.
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Ksenia M. Shilikhina. (2021) Ironic Comments in the Public Discourse of Russian Diplomats. Current Issues in Philology and Pedagogical Linguistics:3(2021), pages 75-86.
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