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Last update:
5 September 2010

© John Benjamins
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Academic Writing

Intercultural and textual issues

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Edited by Eija Ventola and Anna Mauranen
Martin-Luther-University, Halle-Wittenberg / Savonlinna School of Transl

1996. xiv, 258 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 5053 7 / EUR 110.00
978 1 55619 802 1 / USD 165.00
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Writing is crucial to the academic world. It is the main mode of communication among scientists and scholars and also a means for students for obtaining their degrees. The papers in this volume highlight the intercultural, generic and textual complexities of academic writing. Comparisons are made between various traditions of academic writing in different cultures and contexts and the studies combine linguistic analyses with analyses of the social settings in which academic writing takes place and is acquired. The common denominator for the papers is writing in English and attention is given to native-English writers’ and non-native writers’ problems in different disciplines. The articles in the book introduce a variety of methodological approaches for analyses and search for better teaching methods and ways of improving the syllabi of writing curricula. The book as a whole illustrates how linguists strive for new research methods and practical applications in applied linguistics.


Table of contents

Preface
vii
Acknowledgements
xii
1. Context and Genre
Strategic Vagueness in Academic Writing
Greg Myers
3
Three Hypothetical Strategies in Philosophical Writing
Thomas Bloor
19
Occluded Genres in the Academy: The Case of the Submission Letter
John M. Swales
45
Academic Writing in Computer Science: A Comparison of Genres
A. Meriel Bloor
59
The Hidden Curriculum of Technology for Academic Writing: Toward a Research Agenda
Lars Sigfred Evensen
89
2. Culture and Textuality
‘Look in Thy Heart and Write’: Students’ Representations of Writing and Learning to Write in a Foreign Language
Philip Riley
115
Academic Writing in Czech and English
Svĕtla Čmejrková
137
Packing and Unpacking of Information in Academic Texts
Eija Ventola
153
Discourse Competence — Evidence from Thematic Development in Native and Non-Native Texts
Anna Mauranen
195
Learning Discipline-Specific Academic Writing: A Case Study of a finnish Graduate Student in the United States
Ulla Connor and Susan Mayberry
231
Name Index
255
Subject Index
258