Interpersonal & Intercultural Communication

  • R.E. Sanders (2017).  Overcoming differences and achieving common ground: Why speaker and hearer make the effort and how they go about it.  In R. Giora & M. Haugh (Eds.), Doing pragmatics interculturally: Cognitive, philosophical, and sociopragmatic perspectives (pp. 31-54).  Berlin: DeGruyter Mouton. 
  • R.E. Sanders (2012). The representation of self through the dialogic properties of talk and conduct. Language and Dialogue, 2 (1), 28-40.
  • R.E. Sanders (2003). Conversational socializing on marine VHF radio: Adapting Laughter and other practices to the technology in use. In P. Glenn, C. LeBaron, & J. Mandelbaum, (Eds.)  Studies in language and social interaction (pp. 309-326).  Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
  • R.E. Sanders (1999). The impossibility of a culturally contexted conversation analysis: On simultaneous, distinct types of pragmatic meaning.  Research on Language and Social Interaction, 32, 129-140.
  • R.E. Sanders (1997).  Find your partner and do-si-do: The formation of personal relationships between social beings.  Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 14, 387-415.
  • R.E. Sanders (1995). A neo-rhetorical perspective: The enactment of role-identities as interactive and strategic.  In S.J. Sigman (Ed.), The consequentiality of communication (pp. 67-120). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
  • K.L. Fitch & R.E. Sanders (1994).  Culture, communication, and preferences for directness in expression of directives. Communication Theory, 4, 219-245.
  • R.E. Sanders (1986). Communicating across the borders of speech communities. In W. Gudykunst (Ed.), Intergroup communication (pp. 137-151). London: Wm. Arnold.