Article published In: Written Language & Literacy
Vol. 12:1 (2009) ► pp.1–25
Developing a depersonalized stance through linguistic means in typologically different languages
Written expository discourse
Published online: 18 August 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/wll.12.1.01jis
https://doi.org/10.1075/wll.12.1.01jis
Attaining rhetorical competence requires the capacity to use linguistic form to communicate discourse stance as well as discourse content. Languages provide their speakers with a range of options to express content in ways that reveal orientation, generality of reference, and attitude to the propositional content of their message to create a more involved or detached discourse stance. This paper focuses on the linguistic means used by children (9–10-, 12–13-, and 15–16-year olds) and university graduate students in French and Spanish in their attempt to create a detached discourse stance in expository texts. Two types of linguistic means for encoding discourse stance are examined: local devices which call for the manipulation of morphology and the lexicon, and phrase-level devices which require manipulation of argument structure. Our results show (1) that children in both languages are sensitive to the necessity of encoding a depersonalized discourse stance in expository texts early on; (2) that local devices are productive before those involving the rearrangement of argument structure; and (3) that with development and increasing interaction with academic texts the range of devices employed increases. The data reveal that for the phrase-level devices French speakers prefer passive constructions, while Spanish-speakers prefer se-constructions. Our results illustrate how later language development is influenced by language-specific facts and literacy interacting with universally shared communicative needs.
Cited by (16)
Cited by 16 other publications
Ben-Zvi, Galit, Hadass Landau & Dorit Ravid
Yakushkina, Maria
Zwilling, Racheli & Dorit Ravid
Leiva-Quiroz, Pilar
Pierre, Emeline
Ravid, Dorit & Liat Hershkovitz
2017. The development of Hebrew conjunct constructions in narration. In Developmental Perspectives in Written Language and Literacy,
Berman, Ruth A.
Berman, Ruth A.
Nir, Bracha & Irit Katzenberger
Perera, Joan, Melina Aparici, Elisa Rosado & Naymé Salas
Asención-Delaney, Yuly
2014. Chapter 3.2 A Multi-Dimensional analysis of advanced written L2 Spanish. In Multi-Dimensional Analysis, 25 years on [Studies in Corpus Linguistics, 60], ► pp. 239 ff.
Asención‐Delaney, Yuly
Rosado, Elisa, Naymé Salas, Melina Aparici & Liliana Tolchinsky
[no author supplied]
2023. The Ashby legacy. In On Spoken French [Studies in Language Companion Series, 226], ► pp. 415 ff.
[no author supplied]
2023. The Ashby legacy. In On Spoken French [Studies in Language Companion Series, 226], ► pp. 363 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 23 november 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.
