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1
Corpus applications in applied linguistics
Handford, Michael. - : Continuum, 2012
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2
Discipline and divergence: evidence of specificity in EAP
Hyland, Ken. - : Garnet Education, 2012
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3
Disciplinary identities: individuality and community in academic writing
Hyland, Ken. - : Cambridge University Press, 2012
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4
Discourse in the workplace
Holmes, J.. - : Continuum International Publishing Group, 2011
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5
Learning to write: issues in theory, research, and pedagogy
Hyland, Ken. - : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2011
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6
Corpora and EAP: specificity in disciplinary discourses
Hyland, Ken. - : Peter Lang GmbH, 2011
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7
Looking through corpora into writing practices
Hyland, Ken. - : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2011
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8
Projecting an academic identity in some reflective genres
Hyland, Ken. - : Asociacion Europea de Lenguas para Fines Especificos, 2011
Abstract: Research on academic writing has long stressed the connection between writing and the creation of an author’s identity (Ivanič, 1998; Hyland, 2010). Identity is said to be created from the texts we engage in and the linguistic choices we make, thus relocating it from hidden processes of cognition to its social construction in discourse. Issues of agency and conformity, stability and change, remain controversial, however. Some writers question whether there is an unchanging self lurking behind such discourse and suggest that identity is a “performance” (see for instance Butler, 1990) while others see identity as the product of dominant discourses tied to institutional practices (Foucault, 1972). All this has been of particular interest to teachers and researchers of EAP because students and academics alike often feel uncomfortably positioned, even alienated, by the conventions of academic discourse. They sometimes complain that the voice they are forced to use requires them to “talk like a book” by adopting a formal and coldly analytical persona. In this paper I want to explore how we construct an identity in three rather neglected academic genres where the requirements of anonymity and impersonality are more relaxed. In thesis acknowledgements, doctoral prize applications and bio statements, writers are exempted from formal conventions of disciplinary argument and have an opportunity to reveal something of how they want to be seen by others. My question is: What use do they make of with these opportunities?
Keyword: HM Sociology; P Philology. Linguistics; Z004 Books. Writing. Paleography
URL: http://www.doaj.org/doaj?func=abstract&id=775198
http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/48559/
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9
Academic discourse
Hyland, Ken. - : Continuum International Publishing Group, 2011
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10
Continuum companion to discourse analysis
Hyland, Ken; Paltridge, Brian. - : Continuum International Publishing Group, 2011
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11
Disciplines and discourses: social interactions in the construction of knowledge
Hyland, Ken. - : Parlor Press and the WAC Clearinghouse, 2011
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12
English for academic purposes and discourse analysis
Hyland, Ken. - : Routledge, 2011
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13
Disciplinary specificity: discourse, context and ESP
Hyland, Ken. - : University of Michigan Press, 2011
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14
English for professional academic purposes: writing for scholarly publication
Hyland, Ken. - : University of Michigan Press, 2010
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15
Constructing proximity: relating to readers in popular and professional science
Hyland, Ken. - : Pergamon, 2010
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16
Being Swales and Cameron: constructing identity in applied linguistics
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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17
Discursive practices in EAP: unpacking specificity in academic writing
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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18
"Dinosaur teens were keen on sex": proximity in professional and popular science
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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19
Genre analysis: theory, analysis and pedagogy
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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20
Knowledge transfer and academic context: specificity in EAP
Hyland, Ken. - 2010
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