HIGHLIGHTS
- What: The paper attempts to critically re-examine the concept of absence by building on the longstanding research interest in the linguistic and discursive representations of human mobility in the context of anthropogenic climate change (Bevitori and amp; Johnson, 2017, 2022). In light of these insights, the aim of this exploratory and speculative study is to map absence/presence across time and space by taking a corpus-assisted methodological and analytical approach. The first concerned whether and, if so, how climate-related human (im)mobility is articulated in time and space and across genres. In the first . . .
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