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emotion. In D. Fox, I. Prilleltensky & Austin, S. (Eds). An introduction to critical psychology, London: Sage.
Hepburn, A. & Potter, J. (2010). Interrogating tears: Some uses of ‘tag questions’ in a child protection helpline. In A.F.
Freed & S. Ehrlich (Eds). “Why Do You Ask?”: The Function of Questions in Institutional Discourse (pp. 69- 86). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Lemish, D. & Tidhar, C. (1999). Still marginal: Women in Israel’s 1996 television election campaign. Sex Roles, 41, 389-412.
Hepburn, A. & Potter, J. (2011). Recipients designed: Tag questions and gender. In S. Speer and E.H. Stokoe (Eds.)
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Lemish, D. & Barzel, I. (2000). “Four Mothers:” The womb in the public sphere European Journal of Communication, 15(2), 147-169. Reprinted in: McQuail, D., Golding, P., & de Bens, E. (Eds.), (2005), Communication theory & research: An EJC anthology (pp. 125-138). London, UK: Sage.
Potter, J. & Hepburn, A. (2012). Eight challenges for interview researchers. J.F. Gubrium and J.A. Holstein (Eds). Handbook of Interview Research (2nd Ed.) (pp. 555-570). London: Sage.
Lemish, D. (2000). The whore and the other: Israeli images of female immigrants from the former USSR. Gender and Society, 14(2), 333-349. Reprinted in: Caspi, D. and Elias, N. (Eds.) (2014). Ethnic Minorities and Media in the Holy Land (pp. 13-26). London and Portland, OR: Vallentine Mitchell.
Lemish, D. & Tidhar, C. (2001). How global does it get? The Teletubbies in Israel. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 45(4), 558-574.
Lemish, D. (2002). Normalizing inequality: Portrayals of women in Israeli media The Journal of Israeli History, 21(1-2), 110-125. Reprinted in: Naveh, H. (ed.) (2003). Israeli family and community: Women’s time (pp.110-125). London, UK: Vallentine Mitchelle,
Lemish, D. (2002). Gender at the forefront: Feminist perspectives on action theoretical approaches in communication research. Communications: The European Journal of Communication Research, 27(1), 63-78.