Article published In: English Text Construction
Vol. 7:1 (2014) ► pp.122–144
Interaction in two journalistic genres
A study of interactional metadiscourse
Published online: 28 April 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/etc.7.1.05fu
https://doi.org/10.1075/etc.7.1.05fu
The study of interactive features of language has been a very productive source of insights into written discourse in recent years, revealing the ways that writers engage with readers to successfully persuade them of a particular viewpoint in a range of different genres and contexts. While a variety of approaches have illuminated our understanding of these features, the concept of interactional metadiscourse has been particularly valuable in revealing how writers project themselves into their discourse to signal their understandings of their material and their audience. In this paper we draw on Hyland’s (2005a) model of metadiscourse to explore some of the ways that interaction contributes to the success of two journalistic genres: popular science and opinion articles. Examining 200 popular science and 200 opinion texts, we show that despite the broadly similar audience and sources of these genres, authors structure their interactions very differently, contributing to the rhetorical distinctiveness of these genres. The paper not only offers a detailed account of interactional metadiscourse in these genres, but illustrates how interpersonal connections are accomplished for particular persuasive purposes in everyday public texts.
References (38)
Ädel, Annelie. 2006. Metadiscourse in L1 and L2 English. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Biber, Douglas and Edward Finegan. 1989. Styles of stance in English: Lexical and grammatical marking of evidentiality and affect. Text 91: 93–124.
Chafe, Wallace L. and Johanna Nichols (eds.). 1986. Evidentiality: The Linguistic Coding of Epistemology. Norwood, NJ: Ablex.
Connor, Ulla and Thomas A. Upton (eds.). 2004. Discourse in the Professions: Perspectives from Corpus Linguistics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Dueñas, Pilar Mur. 2010. Attitude markers in business management research articles: A cross-cultural corpus-driven approach. International Journal of Applied Linguistics 20 (1): 50–72.
Gillaerts, Paul and Freek Van de Velde. 2010. Interactional metadiscourse in research article abstracts. Journal of English for Academic Purposes 9 (2): 128–139.
Harwood, Nigel. 2007. Political scientists on the functions of personal pronouns in their writing: An interview-based study of ‘I’ and ‘we’. Text and Talk 271: 27–54.
2001. Bringing in the reader: Addressee features in academic articles. Written Communication 18 (4): 549–574.
2002b. Directives: Argument and engagement in academic writing. Applied Linguistics 23 (2): 215–239.
2005b. Stance and engagement: A model of interaction in academic discourse. Discourse Studies 7 (2): 173–191.
2010. Constructing proximity: Relating to readers in popular and professional science. Journal of English for Academic Purposes 91: 116–127.
Hyland, Ken and Carmen Sancho Guinda (eds.). 2012. Stance and Voice in Written Academic Genres. London: Palgrave.
Hyland, Ken and Polly Tse. 2004. Metadiscourse in academic writing: A reappraisal. Applied Linguistics 25 (2): 156–177.
Kim, Chul-Kyu. 2009. Personal pronouns in English and Korean texts: A corpus-based study in terms of textual interaction. Journal of Pragmatics 411: 2086–2099.
Kim, Chul-Kyu and Geoff Thompson. 2010. Obligation and reader involvement in English and Korean science popularizations: A corpus-based cross-cultural text analysis. Text and Talk 30 (1): 53–73.
Kinneavy, James E. 1969. The basic aims of discourse. College Composition and Communication 20 (5): 297–304.
Kuo, Chih-Hua. 1999. The use of personal pronouns: Role relationships in scientific journal articles. English for Specific Purposes 18 (2): 121–138.
Markkanen, Raija and Hartmut Schröder (eds.). 1997. Hedging and Discourse: Approaches to the Analysis of a Pragmatic Phenomenon in Academic Texts. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.
Martin, James R. 2000. Beyond exchange: Appraisal systems in English. In Evaluation in Text: Authorial Stance and the Construction of Discourse, Susan Hunston and Geoff Thompson (eds.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 142–175.
Martin, James R. and Peter R.R. White. 2005. The Language of Evaluation: Appraisal in English. London: Palgrave/Macmillan.
Myers, Greg. 1989. The pragmatics of politeness in scientific articles. Applied Linguistics 10 (1): 1–35.
2003. Discourse studies of scientific popularization: Questioning the boundaries. Discourse Studies 5 (2): 265–279.
Pellechia, Marianne G. 1997. Trends in science coverage: A content analysis of three US newspapers. Public Understanding of Science 61: 49–68.
Proctor, Katarzyna and Lily I-Wen Su. 2011. The 1st person plural in political discourse – American politicians in interviews and in a debate. Journal of Pragmatics 431: 3251–3266.
Thompson, Geoff and Puleng Thetela. 1995. The sound of one hand clapping: The management of interaction in written discourse. Text 15 (1): 103–127.
Thompson, Geoff and Susan Hunston. 2000. Evaluation: An introduction. In Evaluation in Text: Authorial Stance and the Construction of Discourse, Susan Hunston and Geoff Thompson (eds.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1–27.
Vande Kopple, William J. 1985. Some exploratory discourse on metadiscourse. College Composition and Communication 361: 82–93.
Cited by (49)
Cited by 49 other publications
Al Darwesh, Ahmad Qassim
Chang, Yu‐Yun
Liu, Shijie, Minggui Duan & Yan Zhang
Rodriguez Cuadrado, Ruth & Paloma Úbeda Mansilla
Wang, Jialu & Geqi Wu
2025. Using interactional metadiscourse for rapport management. Pragmatics. Quarterly Publication of the International Pragmatics Association (IPrA)
Yu, Hong & Ju Wen
Chung, Edsoulla, Peter Robert Crosthwaite & Cynthia Lee
Liu, Luda & Feng (Kevin) Jiang
Al-Subhi, Aisha Saadi
Al-Subhi, Aisha Saadi
2025. Interactional multimodal metadiscourse in public health posters during the COVID-19 pandemic. Pragmatics and Society 16:2 ► pp. 255 ff.
Alghazo, Sharif, Khulood Al-Anbar, Marwan Jarrah, Ghaleb Rabab’ah & Mutasim Al-Deaibes
Alghazo, Sharif, Khulood Al-Anbar , Abdel Rahman Altakhaineh & Marwan Jarrah
Batchelor, Jordan
Chen, Lin & Chun Li
Chen, Yun Han & Ju Chuan Huang
Chou, Isabelle, Weiyi Li, Kanglong Liu & Dipima Buragohain
Kozlova, Natalya Yu.
Lehman, Iga Maria & Łukasz Sułkowski
Urloi, Maria Cristina & Miguel F. Ruiz-Garrido
Albalat-Mascarell, Ana & María Luisa Carrió-Pastor
2022. Marcadores de implicación en los discursos de campaña para las elecciones generales de 2016 en España. Spanish in Context 19:3 ► pp. 537 ff.
Biri, Ylva
Boginskaya, Olga
Hyland, Ken, Wenbin Wang & Feng (Kevin) Jiang
Jalli, Nuurrianti, Siti Aeisha Joharry & Sabariah Mohamed Salleh
Nádraská, Zuzana
Ruonan, Lin & Ghayth Kamel Shaker Al-Shaibani
Wu, Xinxin & He Yang
Wu, Xinxin & He Yang
侯, 颖
Cuevas-Alonso, Miguel & Carla Míguez-Álvarez
Shen, Qian, Yating Tao & Natalia Grabar
Thornborrow, Joanna, Mats Ekstrom & Marianna Patrona
Ye, Yunping
Zhang, Dongyun & Diyun Sheng
Zhang, Dongyun & Diyun Sheng
Colussi, Juliana & Paula Melani Rocha
Lee, William Wai Lam
Saidi, Mavadat & Masoomeh Saiedi
付, 晓丽
付, 晓丽
贾, 雪玲
Bagheri, Fatemeh & Liming Deng
Farouq, Sahar
Farnia, Maryam & Nahid Mohammadi
Pilkington, Olga A.
Hyland, Ken
Zhang, Man
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 9 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
