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Register, Genre, and Style (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics) PDF

356 Pages·2009·1.72 MB·English
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This page intentionally left blank Register, Genre, and Style This book describes the most important kinds of texts in English and introduces the methodological techniques used to analyze them. Three analytical approaches are introduced and compared, describing a wide rangeoftextsfromtheperspectivesofregister,genre,andstyle. Theprimaryfocusofthebookisontheanalysisofregisters.Part1intro- ducesananalyticalframeworkforstudyingregisters,genreconventions, and styles. Part 2 provides detailed descriptions of particular text vari- eties in English, including spoken interpersonal varieties (conversation, universityofficehours,serviceencounters),writtenvarieties(newspapers, academicprose,fiction),andemergingelectronicvarieties(e-mail,inter- netforums,textmessages).Finally,Part3introducesadvancedanalytical approachesusingcorpora,anddiscussestheoreticalconcerns,suchasthe placeofregisterstudiesinlinguistics,andpracticalapplicationsofregister analysis.Eachchapterendswiththreetypesofactivities:reflectionand reviewactivities,analysisactivities,andlargerprojectideas. douglas biber isRegents’ProfessorofAppliedLinguisticsatNorth- ern Arizona University. He has worked in Kenya and Somalia, and has beenavisitingprofessoratseveraluniversities,includingtheUniversity of Uppsala, University of Helsinki, University of Zurich, the Freiburg InstituteofAdvancedStudies,andtheNorwegianAcademyofArtsand Sciences.HispreviousbooksincludeVariationacrossSpeechandWrit- ing,DimensionsofRegisterVariation,CorpusLinguistics,TheLongman GrammarofSpokenandWrittenEnglish,andDiscourseontheMove. susan conrad is Professor of Applied Linguistics at Portland State University.ShehasworkedinSouthernAfricaandKorea,andconducted workshopsondiscourseanalysisandcorpuslinguisticsinEurope,South America,andThailand.HerpreviousbooksincludeCorpusLinguistics, TheLongmanGrammarofSpokenandWrittenEnglish,andTheStudent GrammarofSpokenandWrittenEnglish. CAMBRIDGE TEXTBOOKS IN LINGUISTICS Generaleditors:p. austin, j. bresnan, b. comrie, s. crain, w. dressler, c. ewen, r. lass, d. lightfoot, k. rice, i. roberts, s. romaine, n. v. smith Register, Genre, and Style Inthisseries: r. a. hudsonSociolinguisticsSecondedition a. j. elliotChildLanguage p. h. matthewsSyntax a. radfordTransformationalSyntax l. bauerEnglishWord-Formation s. c. levinsonPragmatics g. brownandg. yuleDiscourseAnalysis r. huddlestonIntroductiontotheGrammarofEnglish r. lassPhonology b. comrieTense w. kleinSecondLanguageAcquisition a. j. woods,p. fletcheranda. hughesStatisticsinLanguageStudies d. a. cruseLexicalSemantics a. radfordTransformationalGrammar m. garmanPsycholinguistics g. g. corbettGender h. j. giegerichEnglishPhonology r. cannFormalSemantics j. laverPrinciplesofPhonetics f. r. palmerGrammaticalRolesandRelations m. a. jonesFoundationsofFrenchSyntax a. radfordSyntacticTheoryandtheStructureofEnglish:AMinimalistApproach r. d. van valin, jr,andr. j. lapollaSyntax:Structure,MeaningandFunction a. durantiLinguisticAnthropology a. cruttendenIntonationSecondedition j. k. chambersandp. trudgillDialectologySecondedition c. lyonsDefiniteness r. kagerOptimalityTheory j. a. holmAnIntroductiontoPidginsandCreoles g. g. corbettNumber c. j. ewenandh. van der hulstThePhonologicalStructureofWords f. r. palmerMoodandModalitySecondedition b. j. blakeCaseSecondedition e. gussmanPhonology:AnalysisandTheory m. yipTone w. croftTypologyandUniversalsSecondedition f. coulmasWritingSystems:AnIntroductiontotheirLinguisticAnalysis p. j. hopperande. c. traugottGrammaticalizationSecondedition l. whiteSecondLanguageAcquisitionandUniversalGrammar i. plagWord-FormationinEnglish w. croftanda. cruseCognitiveLinguistics a. siewierskaPerson a. radfordMinimalistSyntax:ExploringtheStructureofEnglish d. bu¨ringBindingTheory m. buttTheoriesofCase n. hornstein,j. nun˜esandk. grohmannUnderstandingMinimalism b. c. lustChildLanguage:AcquisitionandGrowth g. g. corbettAgreement j. c. l. ingramNeurolinguistics:AnIntroductiontoSpokenLanguageProcessingand itsDisorders j. clacksonIndo-EuropeanLinguistics:AnIntroduction m. arielPragmaticsandGrammar r. cann,r. kempsonande. gregoromichelakiSemantics:AnIntroduction toMeaninginLanguage y. matrasLanguageContact d. biberands. conradRegister,Genre,andStyle Register, Genre, and Style DOUGLAS BIBER NorthernArizonaUniversity SUSAN CONRAD PortlandStateUniversity CAMBRIDGEUNIVERSITYPRESS Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo, Delhi, Dubai, Tokyo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521860604 © Douglas Biber and Susan Conrad 2009 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provision of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published in print format 2009 ISBN-13 978-0-511-65825-9 eBook (NetLibrary) ISBN-13 978-0-521-86060-4 Hardback ISBN-13 978-0-521-67789-9 Paperback Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of urls for external or third-party internet websites referred to in this publication, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate. Contents Acknowledgements pageix 1 Registers,genres,andstyles:fundamental varietiesoflanguage 1 1.1 Textvarietiesinyourdailylife 1 1.2 Texts,varieties,registers,anddialects 4 1.3 Registersandregisteranalysis:anoverview 6 1.4 Differentperspectivesontextvarieties: register,genre,style 15 1.5 Register/genrevariationasalinguisticuniversal 23 1.6 Overviewofthebook 25 PartI Analyticalframework 2 Describingthesituationalcharacteristicsofregisters andgenres 31 2.1 Introduction 31 2.2 Issuesintheidentificationofregistersandgenres 31 2.3 Aframeworkforsituationalanalysis 36 2.4 Applyingthesituationalanalyticalframeworkinaregisterstudy 47 3 Analyzinglinguisticfeaturesandtheirfunctions 50 3.1 Introduction 50 3.2 Fundamentalissuesforthelinguisticanalysisofregisters 51 3.3 Conductingquantitativeanalyses 58 3.4 Decidingonthelinguisticfeaturestoinvestigate 63 3.5 Functionalinterpretations 64 3.6 Textualconventions:thegenreperspective 69 3.7 Pervasivelinguisticfeaturesthatarenotdirectlyfunctional:the styleperspective 71 3.8 Embeddedregistersandgenres 72 3.9 Ashortintroductiontocorpuslinguistics 73 3.10 Small-scaleversuslarge-scaleregisteranalyses 74 PartII Detaileddescriptionsofregisters,genres,andstyles 4 Interpersonalspokenregisters 85 4.1 Introduction 85 4.2 Conversation 86 vii viii Contents 4.3 Universityofficehours 96 4.4 Serviceencounters 102 4.5 Conclusion 105 5 Writtenregisters,genres,andstyles 109 5.1 Introduction 109 5.2 Situationalcharacteristicsofnewspaperwritingandacademic prose 110 5.3 Linguisticfeaturesinnewspaperwritingand academicprose 114 5.4 Variationwithinthegeneralregisters 124 5.5 Morespecificsubregisters:researcharticlesections 129 5.6 Researcharticlesfromagenreperspective 131 5.7 Variationinfictionduetostyle 132 5.8 Conclusion 139 6 Historicalevolutionofregisters,genres,andstyles 143 6.1 Introduction 143 6.2 HistoricalchangeI:thefictionalnovel 144 6.3 HistoricalchangeII:thescientificresearcharticle 157 6.4 Historicalchangeinthepatternsofregistervariation 166 7 Registersandgenresinelectroniccommunication 177 7.1 Introduction:newtechnologyandnewregisters 177 7.2 Individuale-mailmessages 178 7.3 E-forumpostings 190 7.4 Textmessages 199 7.5 Chaptersummary 208 PartIII Largertheoreticalissues 8 Multidimensionalpatternsofregistervariation 215 8.1 Comparingmultipleregisters 215 8.2 Introductiontomultidimensionalanalysis 223 8.3 MDanalysisofuniversityspokenandwrittenregisters 226 8.4 Summaryandconclusion 245 9 Registerstudiesincontext 253 9.1 Registerstudiesinthebroadercontextoflinguistics 253 9.2 RegistervariationinlanguagesotherthanEnglish 256 9.3 Speechandwriting 260 9.4 Registervariationandsociolinguistics 264 9.5 Registerstudiesinthebroadercontextoftheworld 267 AppendixA Annotationofmajorregister/genrestudies (byFedericaBarbieri) 271 AppendixB Activitytexts 296 References 315 Index 339

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This book describes the most important kinds of texts in English and introduces the methodological techniques used to analyse them. Three analytical approaches are introduced and compared, describing a wide range of texts from the perspectives of register, genre and style. The primary focus of the b
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.