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Potter, J. & Puchta, C. (2007). Mind, mousse and moderation. In A. Hepburn and S. Wiggins (Eds). Discursive Research in Practice (pp.104-123). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lewis, L. K. (2009, November). Organizational change: An introduction. Presented on competitive paper panel to the Organizational Communication Division at the annual meeting of the National Communication Association, Chicago, IL.
Lemish, D. & Muhlbauer, V. (2012). “Can’t have it all”: Representations of older women in popular culture. Women & Therapy, 35(3-4), 165-180.
Wiggins, S. & Potter, J. (2008). Discursive psychology. In Willig, C. & Stainton-Rogers, W. (Eds). The SAGE handbook of qualitative research in psychology (pp. 73-90). London; Sage.
Potter, J. & Hepburn, A. (2008). Discursive constructionism. In Holstein, J.A. & Gubrium, J.F. (Eds). Handbook of constructionist research (pp. 275-293). NewYork: Guildford.
Shalev, S. & Lemish, D. (2013). “Infertile motherhood”: The television construction of surrogacy. Feminist Media Studies, 13(2), 321-336.
Potter, J. (2010). Discursive psychology and the study of naturally occurring talk. In D. Silverman (Ed.) Qualitative Research: Theory, method and practice 3rd Edition (pp. 187-207). London: Sage.
Hepburn, A. & Potter, J. (2011). Recipients designed: Tag questions and gender. In S. Speer & E. Stokoe (Eds). Conversation analysis and gender (pp.137-154). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Lewis, L. K., & Laster, N. M. (2011, November). Changing stories. A paper presented to the Organizational Communication Division at the annual meeting of the National Communication Association, New Orleans, LA.
Lesk, M.E., “Can Unix Survive Secret Source Code?,” Computing Systems, 1, 4, pp. 189-199, ACM Press, Waterloo, Ont. (1988). Also presented at the Public Record Office, Kew; see their conference on preservation.