Article published In: (Inter)Cultural Dialogues
Edited by Răzvan Săftoiu
[Language and Dialogue 13:3] 2023
► pp. 309–335
Building trust in the transport sector during the pandemic
A cross-cultural analysis
Published online: 18 September 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/ld.00154.bon
https://doi.org/10.1075/ld.00154.bon
Abstract
This paper looks at cross-cultural variation in corporate communication over the pandemic, focusing on the
language adopted by rail companies in the UK and Italy to enhance trust in safety and highlighting how they engage in
communicative action with potential passengers and other online users. The analysis shows that UK companies generally prefer
personal forms of self-mention and avoid technicisms, while Italian companies adopt more formal language and more impersonal forms
of self-representation. Common elements seem to be related to repeated communicative functions, and the semantic elements they
involve, thus highlighting the close link between pragmatic units and lexico-grammatical patterns (with their semantics), as well
as the interplay between meaning, dialogic action and context in communication.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Materials and methods
- 3.Railway websites: The lexis of H&S
- 3.1H&S webpages
- 3.1.1Wordlists and keyword lists
- 3.1.2Collocation analysis of H&S webpages
- 3.2CSR webpages
- 3.2.1Wordlists and keyword lists
- 3.2.1Collocation analysis and phraseology in CSR webpages
- 3.3Summing up
- 3.1H&S webpages
- 4.Trust repair strategies in H&S communication
- 4.1Trust repair strategies in H&S webpages
- 4.2Trust Repair Strategies in CSR webpages
- 4.2.1Trust repair strategies in Italian CSR webpages
- 4.2.2Trust repair strategies in UK CSR webpages
- 5.Conclusions
References
References (47)
Abbas, Ali Haif. 2022. “Politicizing COVID-19
vaccines in the press: A critical discourse analysis”. International Journal for the Semiotics
of Law-Revue internationale de Sémiotique
juridique 35(3): 1167–1185.
Aiezza, Maria Cristina. 2015. “We May Face the Risks”…
“Risks that Could Adversely Affect Our Face”. A Corpus-assisted Discourse Analysis of Modality Markers in CSR
Reports”. Studies in Communication
Sciences 15 (1): 68–76.
Al-Mwzaiji, Khaled N. A. 2021. “The Political Spin of
Conviction: A Critical Discourse Analysis of the Origin of Covid-19”. GEMA Online Journal of
Language
Studies 21(1): 239–242.
Anthony, Laurence. 2020. AntConc (Version
3.5.9) [Computer Software]. Waseda University, Tokyo. [URL]
Berrocal, Martina, Michael Kranert, Paola Attolino, Júlio Antonio Bonatti Santos, Sara Garcia Santamaria, Nancy Henaku, Aimée Danielle Lezou Koffi, Camilla Marziani, Viktorija Mažeikienė, Dasniel Olivera Pérez, Kumaran Rajandran, and Aleksandra Salamurović. 2021. “Constructing
collective identities and solidarity in premiers’ early speeches on COVID-19: a global
perspective”. Humanities and Social Sciences
Communications 8 (1): 1–12
Bhatia, Aditi. 2012. “The
Corporate Social Responsibility Report: The Hybridization of a “Confused” Genre
(2007–2011)”. IEEE Transactions on Professional
Communication 55 (3): 221–238.
Bondi, Marina. 2016a. “The
Future in Reports: Prediction, Commitment and Legitimization in CSR.” Pragmatics and
Society 7 (1): 57–81.
. 2016b. “CSR
Reports in English and Italian: Focus on Generic Structure and Importance
Markers”. In Language for Specific Purposes. Research and Translation
across Cultures and Media, ed. by Giuliana Garzone, Dermot Heaney, and Giorgia Riboni, 168–199. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars.
Bondi, Marina and Danni Yu. 2018. “The
Generic Structure of CSR Reports: Dynamicity, Multimodality, Complexity and
Recursivity”. In Discourse Communication and the Enterprise: When
Business Meets Language, ed. by Walter Giordano and Giuliana Garzone, 176–205. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars.
Breeze, Ruth. 2012. “Legitimation
in Corporate Discourse: Oil Corporations after Deepwater Horizon”. Discourse and
Society 23 (1): 3–18.
Casañ Pitarch, Ricardo. 2015. “The
Genre ‘about Us’: A Case Study of Banks’ Corporate Webpages.” International Journal of Language
Studies 91: 69–96.
Catenaccio, Paola. 2010. “Representations
of Corporate Philanthropy. A Linguistic Approach.” In Discourse,
Identities and Genres in Corporate Communication, ed. by Paola Evangelisti Allori and Giuliana Elena Garzone, 121–142. Bern: Peter Lang.
. 2011. “Green
Advertising and Corporate CSR Communication: Hybrid Discourses, Mutant
Genres”. In Genre(s) on the Move. Hybridization and Discourse Change
in Specialized Communication, ed. by Srikant Sarangi, Vanda Polese, and Giuditta Caliendo, 353–372. Napoli: ESI.
. 2012. Understanding
CSR Discourse. Insights from Linguistics and Discourse
Analysis. Milano: Arcipelago.
Conte, Francesca, Agostino Vollero, Claudia Covucci, and Alfonso Siano. 2020. “Corporate
Social Responsibility Penetration, Explicitness, and Symbolic Communication Practices in Asia: A National Business System
Exploration of Leading Firms in Sustainability”. Corporate Social Responsibility and
Environmental
Management 27 (3): 1425–1435.
Djonov, Emilia. 2007. “Website
Hierarchy and the Interaction between Content Organization, Webpage and Navigation Design: A Systemic Functional Hypermedia
Discourse Analysis Perspective.” Information Design
Journal 15(2): 144–162.
Einwiller, Sabine, Christopher Ruppel, and Alexandra Schnauber. 2016. “Harmonization
and Differences in CSR Reporting of US and German Companies.” Corporate Communications: An
International
Journal 21 (2): 230–245.
Fuoli, Matteo. 2012. “Assessing
Social Responsibility: A Quantitative Analysis of Appraisal in BP’s and IKEA’s Social
Reports.” Discourse and
Communication 6 (1): 55–81.
Fuoli, Matteo and Carita Paradis. 2014. “A
Model of Trust-Repair Discourse.” Journal of
Pragmatics 741: 52–69.
Habib, Muhammad Ahsanul and Md Asif Hasan Anik. 2021. “Impacts
of COVID-19 on Transport Modes and Mobility Behavior: Analysis of Public Discourse in
Twitter.” Transportation Research
Record 2677(4): 65–78.
Hafner, Christoph A. 2021. “Communicating Expertise in the
Covid-19 Pandemic: A Genre Analytical Perspective.” Viral
Discourse, 13–18.
Halliday, M. A. K. and Christian Matthiessen. 2004. An
Introduction to Functional
Grammar. London: Routledge.
Herring, Susan, Dieter Stein, and Tuija Virtanen. 2013. Pragmatics
of Computer-Mediated Communication. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
Hunston, Susan. 2002. Corpora
in Applied Linguistics. Cambridge Applied Linguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jamali, Dima and Ben Neville. 2011. “Convergence
versus Divergence of CSR in Developing Countries: An Embedded Multi-layered Institutional
Lens.” Journal of Business
Ethics 1021: 599–621.
Jaworska, Sylvia. 2021. “Competence
and collectivity: The discourse of Angela Merkel’s media communications during the first wave of the
pandemic.” Discourse, Context and
Media 421, article 100506.
Jiang, Feng (Kevin) and Ken Hyland. 2020. “Prescription
and Reality in Advanced Academic
Writing.” Ibérica 391: 14–42.
Kim, Changsu, Jungkeun Kim, Roger Marshall, and Hajir Afzali. 2018. “Stakeholder
Influence, Institutional Duality, and CSR Involvement of MNC Subsidiaries.” Journal of Business
Research 911: 40–47.
Luzón, María José. 2021. “Digital Genres and Teaching
English for Academic Purposes”. In Research Questions in Language
Education and Applied Linguistics, ed. by Hassan Mohebbi and Christine Coombe, 627–632. Cham: Springer.
Mahlberg, Michaela and Gavin Brookes. 2021. “Introduction.” International
Journal of Corpus
Linguistics 26 (4): 441–443.
Malavasi, Donatella. 2012. “The
Necessary Balance between Sustainability and Economic Success: An Analysis of Fiat’s and Toyota’s Corporate Social
Responsibility Reports.” In The Language Factor in International
Business. New Perspectives on Research, Teaching and Practice, ed. by Priscilla Heynderickx, Sylvain Dieltjens, Jacobs Geert, Paul Gillaerts, and Elizabeth de Groot, 247–264. Bern: Peter Lang.
Martin, James R. and Peter R. R. White. 2005. The
Language of Evaluation. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Medina, Alicia Bolaños, María Jesús Rodríguez Medina, Lydia Bolaños, and Luis Losada García. 2005. “Analysing
Digital Genres: Function and Functionality in Corporate Websites of Computer
Hardware.” Ibérica 91: 123–147.
Mheidly, Nour and Jawad Fares. 2020. “Leveraging
media and health communication strategies to overcome the COVID-19 infodemic.” Public Health
Policy 41(4): 410–420.
Mohammed, Shan, Elizabeth Peter, Tieghan Killackey, and Jane Maciver. 2021. “The
“nurse as hero” discourse in the COVID-19 pandemic: A poststructural discourse
analysis.” International Journal of Nursing
Studies 1171: 103887.
Musolff, Andreas, Ruth Breeze, Kayo Kondo, and Sara Vilar-Lluch. 2022. Pandemic
and Crisis Discourse. Communicating COVID-19 and Public Health
Strategy. London: Bloomsbury.
Piller, Ingrid, Jie Zhang, and Jia Li. 2020. “Linguistic
diversity in a time of crisis: Language challenges of the COVID-19
pandemic.” Multilingua 39 (5): 503–515.
Stubbs, Michael. 2001. Words
and Phrases: Corpus Studies of Lexical Semantics. New Jersey: Blackwell.
Sultan, Sultan and Muhammad Rapi. 2020. “Positive
Discourse Analysis of the Indonesian Government Spokesperson’s Discursive Strategies during the COVID-19
Pandemic.” GEMA Online Journal of Language
Studies 20 (4): 251–272.
Sun, Zhikuan and Yan Zhang. 2022. “Strategic
crisis response of shipping industry in the post COVID-19 era: a case of the top 10 shipping
Lines.” Journal of Marine Science and
Engineering 10(5): 635.
Tenca, Emanuela. 2018. “Remediating
Corporate Communication Through the Web: The Case of ‘About US’ Sections in Companies’ Global
Websites.” ESP
Today 6 (1): 84–106.
Williams, Cynthia A. and Ruth V. Aguilera. 2008. “Corporate
Social Responsibility in a Comparative Perspective.” In The Oxford
Handbook of Corporate Social Responsibility, ed. by Andrew Crane, Abagail McWilliams, Dirk Matten, Jeremy Moon, and Donald Siegel, 452–472. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Yu, Danni and Marina Bondi. 2017. “The
Generic Structure of CSR Reports in Italian, Chinese, and English: A Corpus-Based
Analysis”. IEEE Transactions on Professional
Communication 60 (3): 273–291.
