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Metadiscursive nouns : interaction and persuasion in disciplinary writing

Part of the China perspectives series
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Based on a 1.7-million-word corpus of 160 research articles from both soft and hard knowledge fields, this book sets out to explore how a particular type of noun – namely, the metadiscursive noun – is rhetorically used to mediate writer-reader interaction in disciplinary writing. Analysts of academic discourse have come to regard hedges, reporting verbs, directives and so on as forming part of a wide repertoire of interactive features available to authors, suggesting a variety of terms, including evaluation, stance, appraisal, and metadiscourse.

One aspect which has been less fully explored, however, is the rhetorical role nouns play in achieving writers’ persuasive goals.

This book fills the gap by proposing a particular type of nouns as metadiscursive nouns (as in “this supports our hypotheses that youth are more likely to co-offend when neighbourhoods are less disadvantaged”).

The author aims to find out how writers employ metadiscursive nouns to engage and interact with readers in academic prose, raising theoretical and pedagogical implications and how they can be applied in the teaching of academic writing. This book will be of particular interest to students and scholars working in the areas of English for academic purposes, corpus studies, academic writing, and linguistics in general.

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Product Details
Routledge
1032270055 / 9781032270050
Paperback / softback
808
29/01/2024
United Kingdom
English
220 pages : illustrations (black and white)
24 cm
Reprint. Originally published: 2022.