1. A corpus analysis of disciplinary identity in evaluative journal articles: A Systemic Functional Linguistics approach.
- Author
-
Danis, Nergis
- Subjects
- *
FUNCTIONAL linguistics , *CORPORA , *PRONOUNS (Grammar) , *SOCIAL sciences , *HUMANITIES - Abstract
This study investigates the discursive construction of identity in the largely neglected register of evaluative journal articles (e.g., critiques, rebuttals). The study looks at how disciplinary identity is constructed in this register through the use of the subjective first-person pronoun I from a Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL) perspective. This is done through the analysis of: (1) the variation of I in evaluative journal articles across six disciplines (i.e., Applied Linguistics, Biology, History, Philosophy, Physics, Political Science) and (2) the process types (e.g., material, mental) that authors use with I to construct a particular disciplinary identity. Findings show that social science and humanities authors use I much more frequently than hard science authors, but also that the frequency of I in the hard sciences is not negligible when compared to previous research. Another important finding is that disciplinary differences are reflected in both the frequency and use of process types. The findings are highly relevant for teaching graduate students discipline-appropriate ways of identity construction in evaluative registers, such as critiques. • Hard and soft fields differ in terms of identity projection in evaluative texts. • It is not uncommon for hard science authors to use I in evaluative writing. • Process types help identify differences in the use of I across disciplines. • Material processes are the most commonly used process type in hard sciences. • Mental processes are the most commonly used process type in humanities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF