In:Corpora and Discourse: The challenges of different settings
Edited by Annelie Ädel and Randi Reppen
[Studies in Corpus Linguistics 31] 2008
► pp. 57–92
4. Interaction, identity and culture in academic writing: The case of German, British and American academics in the humanities
Published online: 26 June 2008
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.31.05san
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.31.05san
This chapter aims to illustrate one way in which corpus-linguistic methods and specialised corpora can be combined in work on academic discourse. It reports selected findings from a study of social interaction in research articles written by German, British and US-American humanities academics, based on the 1-million-word SCEGADcorpus.While the main interest of the project was in possible cultural differences in academic discourse, statistical analysis was used to examine the influence also of linguistic background, discipline, author age, status and gender on the construction of identity and the encoding of social relations in academic writing. The findings reveal significant cultural differences, but also demonstrate the influence of variables such as discipline, gender and academic status on author-reader interaction and identity construction in scholarly texts.
Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
Jiang, Jiaxing & Jingyuan Zhang
Ruskan, Anna, Helen Hint, Djuddah Arthur Joost Leijen & Jolanta Šinkūnienė
Guest, Michael
Šinkūnienė, Jolanta
2018. The power of English. In Intercultural Perspectives on Research Writing [AILA Applied Linguistics Series, 18], ► pp. 59 ff.
Mur-Dueñas, Pilar & Jolanta Šinkūnienė
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