Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Book
Author Lewin, Beverley A

Title Expository discourse : a genre-based approach to social science research text / Beverley A. Lewin, Jonathan Fine and Lynne Young
Published New York ; London : Continuum, 2001

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  300.14 Lew/Eda  AVAILABLE
Description viii, 166 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Series Open linguistics series.
Contents 1. A critical review of genre analysis -- 2. Methods -- 3. Setting the stage: analysis of Introduction sections -- 4. Inviting applause: analysis of Discussion sections -- 5. The tie that binds: lexical cohesion -- 6. The cast of characters in scientific texts -- 7. Signalling beginnings and endings -- 8. Conclusions
Summary "This volume provides a detailed and explicit account of the genre of social science research articles. While previous literature has analysed some aspects of the research genre separately, this book presents a comprehensive model which characterizes the generic, registerial and discoursal options as they interweave within a text. Another important contribution of the analysis is the formulation of explicit realization statements that relate the abstract categories of move and act (as described by Swales) to the way these units are actually created by lexical and grammatical choices. The realization networks draw on the work of systemic functional linguists, primarily Halliday, Hasan, Martin and Ventola. The added emphasis in this study is that research texts are ultimately persuasive texts, and genre 'constraints' can be tightened or loosened in response to the rhetorical dimension."
"The description of the social science research genre is important both for those teaching English to speakers and readers of other languages and for researchers in discourse structure. For teachers, the detailed analysis of texts and the method for determining realization rules will help in guiding students who must understand and produce research articles. For researchers, the qualitative and quantitative analyses show how the different levels of abstraction, from the genre itself to its moves, acts and wordings, are related to each other. Lastly, this analysis can serve as a model for future descriptions of other academic and professional genres."--BOOK JACKET
Notes "Based on the Ph. D. dissertation of Beverly Lewin"--Acknowledgements
"Based on the Ph.D. dissertation of Beverly Lewin" -Acknowledgements
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [157]-162) and index
Subject Social sciences -- Language.
Discourse analysis.
Social sciences -- Research.
Author Fine, Jonathan, 1949-
Young, Lynne (Linguist)
LC no. 00048391
ISBN 0826449131
0826479251