Invited lectures / talks
Parnell, T. (2024). TikTok algorithms and eating disorder content: a lived experience view. Presented online to monthly EDIFY management meeting attendees.
Parnell, T. (2024). TikTok algorithms and eating disorder content: a lived experience view. Presented online to Senso.cloud at research event.
Parnell, T. (2024). Polycrisis and critical discursive approaches. I-LanD Seminar Series. Online. 21 March 2024.
Bartel, H and Parnell, T. (2024). Mental Health, Lived Experience and Arts & Humanities Approaches. (TikTok and mental health). Pain, Meaning, Mental Health and Self. University of Nottingham. In person. 05 March 2024.
Parnell, T. (2024). Excel in Research Nottingham Advantage Award Introduction. University of Nottingham. Online. 14 February 2024.
Parnell, T. (2024). ‘Homeless’ in the cost-of-living crisis: A corpus-assisted analysis of British national press coverage. BAAL Corpus Linguistics SIG. Online. 17 January 2024.
Parnell, T. (2023). TikTok, identity and (mental) health. Newcastle University. Online. 27 November 2023.
Parnell, T. (2022). “I still felt British”: Negotiating Brexit-related identities through stories. Language, Ideology and Power research group. Lancaster University. 03 February.
Parnell, T. (2021). “I still felt British”: Negotiating Brexit-related identities through stories. Trent Language Sandwich. Nottingham Trent University. 3 November.
Parnell, T. (2021). ‘A nation divided? Constructing Britain in the pro-Brexit British press, 2018–2019.’ University of Sussex, MA module ‘Language and Culture’. 12 February.
Papers
Parnell, T. (2024). Young people’s experiences of eating disorder content on social media. Practicalities and possibilities: Linguistic approaches to short-form social media. University of Nottingham. In-person, 11 September 2024. (Lightning talk).
Parnell, T. (2024). ‘Homeless’ in the cost-of-living crisis: a corpus-assisted analysis of British national media coverage. Corpora and Discourse International Conference 2024, Innsbruck, Austria. In-person, 17-19 July 2024.
Parnell, T. (2024). Exploring representations of the eating disorder voice. BAAL New Media & Health and Science Communication SIG Annual Seminar. Queen Mary, University of London. Online, 29th May 2024.
Parnell, T. (2024). TikTok, young people and eating disorders. Pint of Science. Canalhouse bar, Nottingham. In person. 13 May 2024.
Parnell, T. (2024). My viva experience. Preparing for the viva. University of Nottingham. In-person. 18 April, 2024.
Parnell, T. (2022). “Tinpot revolutionary agitation”: Framing Brexit-related demonstrations in the British pro-Brexit press”. Corpora and Discourse International Conference 2022, Bertinoro, Italy. In-person. 26-28 August 2022.
Parnell, T. (2022). Unravelling the Global Britain vision. International relationships and national identity in UK Government documents about Brexit, 2016-2019. Critical Approaches to Discourse Analysis Across Disciplines Conference 2022, University of Bergamo. 06-08 July. Online.
Parnell, T. (2021). “I still felt British”: Negotiating Brexit-related identities through stories. Identity, Inequality and the Media in Brexit-COVID-19-Britain. University of Exeter. 10 November.
Parnell, T. (2021). Imagining Europe in the pro-Brexit press (2016- 2019): a diachronic analysis of representation and socio-political agenda. 27th International Conference of Europeanists. Online. 25 June.
Parnell, T. (2021). Constructing the “acceptable EU migrant” in the UK Government’s Brexit-related documents. Approaches to Migration, Language and Identity. University of Sussex. Online. 9 June. [See this article written about my presentation in The London Economic].
Parnell, T. (2021). Representing Britain and Europe in the pro-Brexit British press, 2016-2019. Presented at: University of Nottingham School of English Postgraduate Research Symposium. Online. 22 January.
Parnell, T. (2021). United or Divided? Exploring the construction of Britishness in the pro-Brexit press and its socio-political implications. Presented at: Discourse and Politics Seminar Series 2021. Online. 11 January.
Parnell, T. (2020). From union to disunion: a diachronic analysis of national identity construction in the pro-Brexit press (2016-2019). Presented at: Created Identities Conference. Online. 5 September.
Parnell, T. (2020). ‘Plotting’, ‘Robbing’, ‘Revolting’: Remainers and national identity in the pro-Brexit press. Presented at: Corpora and Discourse International Conference. Online. 18 June.
Parnell, T. (2020). Identity, language and discourse. Presented at: AHRC/ESRC roundtable discussion. University of Nottingham. 20 February.
Chairing panels
Panel chair: ‘Past and present’. Chaired at: School of English Research Symposium. 21 January 2022.
Panel chair: ‘Texts, journalism and society in context’. Chaired at: Midlands4Cities Digital Research Festival 2021. Online. 8 June 2021.
Panel chair: ‘Political (mis)information and concluding remarks’. Chaired at: Discourse and Politics Seminar Series 2021. Online. 8 March 2021.
Panel chair: ‘Social movements’. Chaired at: Discourse and Politics Seminar Series 2021. Online. 8 February 2021.
Panel chair: ‘Brexit’. Chaired at: Discourse and Politics Seminar Series 2021. Online. 11 January 2021.
Panel chair: ‘Constructing and exploring social identities’. Chaired at: Languages, Texts and Society 4th Conference: The Researcher’s Journey. Online. 12 June 2020.
Conference organisation
Co-organiser: BAAL/Cambridge University Press Seminar on Practicalities and Possibilities: Linguistic approaches to short-form social media. University of Nottingham. 11th September 2024.
Co-organiser: Discourse and Politics Conference 2023. Online. 11-13 April 2023.
Registration helper: LAGB Conference 2021. September 2021.
Co-organiser: Midlands4Cities Research Festival. Online. 7-11 June 2021.
Co-organiser: Discourse and Politics Seminar Series 2021. Online. January – March 2021.
Programme advisor: University of Nottingham’s School of English Postgraduate Research Symposium. January 2019.
Organiser: The Media Conference 2017. [Media and journalism conference with 70+ delegates as part of my role as Editor-in-Chief of Impact magazine].