1Beebe, L. M. 1995. Polite fictions: Instrumental rudenessas pragmatic competence [A]. In J. E. Alatis, C. A. Straehle, t3. Gallenberger . M. Ronkin (eds.). Linguis- tics and the Education of Language Teachers: Ethnol- inguistic, Psycholinguistics and Sociolinguistic Aspects [C]. Georgetown: Georgetown University Press. 154-68.
2Bousfield, D. 2007. Beginnings, middles and ends: A biopsy of the dynamics of impolite exchanges [J]. Journal of Pragmatics 39(12): 2185-2216.
3Bousfield, D. 2008 Impoliteness in Interaction [M]. Am- sterdam: John Benjamins.
4Brewer, B. . W. Gardner. 1996. Who is this "we"? Levels of collective identity and self representations [J]. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 71 (1) : 83.
5Brown, P. . S. C. Levinson 1987. Politeness: Some Uni- versals in Language Usage (Vol. 4) [M]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
6Burke, J. . E. Stets. 2009. Identity Theory [M]. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
7Campbell, J. D., S. Assanand . A. Di Paula. 2000. Struc- tural features of the self-concept and adjustment [A]. In A. Tesser, R. 13. Felson . J. M. Suls (eds.). Psy- chological Perspectives on Self and Identity [C]. Washington, D. C. : American Psychological Association. 67-87.
8Culpeper, J. 1996. Towards an anatomy of impoliteness [J]. Journal of Pragmatics 25(3) : 349-67.
9Culpeper, J. 2005. Impoliteness and entertainment in the television quiz show: The weakest link [J]. Journal of Politeness Research 1(1) : 35-72.
10Culpeper, J. 2011. Impoliteness: Using Language to Cause Offence [M]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.