User:JennaR819/Free Indirect Speech/Bibliography
Added three reliable sources and subsequent descriptions of the sources' relevance to the revised article.
New page
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== Bibliography ==
Edit this section to compile the bibliography for your Wikipedia assignment. Add the name and/or notes about what each source covers, then use the "Cite" button to generate the citation for that source.
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:* Redeker, G. (1996). Free indirect discourse in newspaper reports. Linguistics in the Netherlands.
:* This article written by Dr. Redeker suggests alternative uses for Free Indirect Discourse (FID). The author covers, in detail, the potential impact of an originally literary technique on periodicals and the field of journalism.
:* Arzoumanov, Anna (2024-01-02). "Free Indirect Discourse in Court: An Overview of Contemporary Jurisprudence in French Press Law". ''Law & Literature''. '''36''' (1): 143–162. [[Doi (identifier)|doi]]:10.1080/1535685X.2022.2115720. [[ISSN (identifier)|ISSN]] 1535-685X
:* Arzoumanov's article of impressive length with a reference list composed of several reliable sources details the process by which potential FID in a novel is confused with an expression of the author/narrator's thoughts in a court room. Much like Redeker's piece, this source bolsters the composition of a new section within the "Free Indirect Speech" Wikipedia article that will detail the significance of FID outside of an entirely literary field.
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:* Cohen, E. (2024). Free Indirect Discourse in Neo-Aramaic Narrative Folktales. Aramaic Studies, 22(1), 105-135.
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:* Cohen's article provides a sample of much needed literary representation for the page. Where Jane Austen and George Orwell are featured throughout the article (with samples of their writing being referenced as prime examples of FID), Cohen's focus on Neo-Aramaic folktales can expand the cultural database from which the page draws.The source itself calls on several verifiable references and discusses research from a fairly neutral standpoint.
==References==
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