Title of article :
Gearing the Discursive Practice to the Evolution of Discipline: Diachronic Corpus Analysis of Stance Markers in Research Articles’ Methodology Section
Author/Authors :
Rezaei, Shirin Department English - Islamic Azad University Tabriz Branch , Iran , Kuhi, Davud English Department - Islamic Azad University Maragheh Branch, Iran , Saeidi, Mahnaz Department English - Islamic Azad University Tabriz Branch , Iran
Abstract :
Despite widespread interest and research among applied linguists to explore
metadiscourse use, very little is known of how metadiscourse resources have
evolved over time in response to the historically developing practices of
academic communities. Motivated by such an ambition, the current research
drew on a corpus of 874315 words taken from three leading journals of applied
linguistics in order to trace the diachronic evolution of stance markers in
methodology section of research articles from 1996 to 2016. Hyland’s (2005b)
model of metadiscourse was adopted for the analysis of the selected corpus.
The data were explored using concordance software AntConc (Anthony,
2011). Moreover, a Chi-Square statistical measure was run to determine
statistical significances. The analysis revealed a significant decline in the
overall frequency of stance markers in methodology section of RAs.
Interestingly, this decrease was entirely due to the overall decline in the use of
self-mentions. Approaching interactional dimension of academic writing from
such a diachronic perspective, it might be argued that the very selective use of
stance markers by academic writers over time means metadiscourse does not
operate in vacuum and is sensitive to changes within disciplines and their
academic practices.
Keywords :
applied linguistics , diachronic , metadiscourse , stance , methodology
Journal title :
The Journal of English Language Pedagogy and Paractice