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Bibliografická citace

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BK
Vyd. 1.
Banská Bystrica : Univerzita Mateja Bela ; V Ostravě : Filozofická fakulta Ostravské univerzity, 2009
233 s. : il. ; 21 cm

ISBN 978-80-8083-809-6 (Univerzita Mateja Bela ; brož.)
ISBN 978-80-7368-687-1 (Ostravská univerzita ; brož.)
Nad názvem: Univerzita Mateja Bela v Banskej Bystrici, Fakulta humanitných vied
Obsahuje bibliografii na s. 207-215 a bibliografické odkazy
České resumé
000177458
Chapter One // ACADEMIC DISCOURSE // 1.1 Research on academic discourse // 1.2 Definitions of the terms used // 1.2.1 Text and discourse // 1.2.2 Text // 1.2.3 Text type // 1.2.4 Genre // 1.3 Academic writing, genre and social dimension // 1.3.1 Genre and social dimension // 1.3.2 The social context of academic writing // 1.3.3 Discourse as social action // 1.3.4 Genre analysis concept // 1.3.4.1 Discourse community and its social dimension // 1.3.4.2 Social dimensions of genre // 1.4 Research article and academic writing // 1.4.1 Research article as a text type // 1.4.1.1 Interaction in research article // 1.4.2 Research article as a genre // 1.4.3 Research article structure // 1.4.3.1 Argumentative vs. experimental // research articles // 1.5 Research and methodological considerations // 1.5.1. Implications and perspectives // 1.5.2 The corpus // Chapter Two // PASSIVE VOICE GRAMMATICAL-RHETORICAL ASPECTS // 2.1 Theoretical and conceptual background // 2.1.1 Research on voice // 2.1.2 The passive in academic texts // 2.1.3 Aims and research methodology // 2.2 Data analysis: The rhetorical macrostructure // 2.2.1 Hypotheses // 2.2.2 Results // 2.2.2.1 Quantitative analysis // 2.2.2.2 Qualitative analysis rhetorical functions and macrostructure // 2.3 Data analysis: Passivization as a systemic potentiality // in research articles // 2.3.1 Passives in text perspective: additive textual functions // 2.3.1.1 The depersonalised text perspectivization // 2.3.1.2 Cohesive and coherent effects of passives // 2.3.1.3 The objectivization of described events // 2.3.1.4 Non-agentive and agentive passivization // 2.4 Summary //
Chapter Three // LEXICAL PATTERNING // 3.1 Cohesion // 3.2 Lexical cohesion // 3.2.1 Halliday and Hasan’s 1976 framework // 3.2.2 Stotsky’s 1983 framework // 3.2.3 Hasan’s 1984 framework // 3.2.4 Hoey’s 1991 framework // 3.3 The application of Hoey’s framework // 3.3.1 Types of repetition // 3.3.2 Links and bonds // 3.3.2.1 Links // 3.3.2.2 Bonds // 3.3.3 Repetition matrices // 3.3.4 Central and marginal sentences // 3.3.5 Topic-opening and topic-closing sentences, // Figures and Tables // Figures // 1 Text and discourse 16 // 2 Macrostructure models 18 // 3 Writer-reader relationship 35 // 4 Goffman’s (1981) concept of the ’author’ 35 // 5 Traditional’ research articles 36 // 6 Macro/microstructure model of the RA 38 // 7 General ’hour-glass’ macrostructure of research article 40 // 8 Overall ’inverted pyramid’ structure of RAs 40 // 9 The realizations of ’WEy 61 // 10 The writer and modality 63 // 11 Cohesion models by Halliday & Hasan and Stotsky 98 // 12 Cohesion model by Hasan 101 // 13 Lexical cohesion model by Hoey 102 // 14 The link triangle 105 // 15 The application of the link triangle 107 // 16 Links between trade and liberalisation 109 // 17 Bonded sentences 111 // 18 Topographical net of bonding 114 // 19 Distance bonding Text 1 I27 // 20 Distance bonding Text 2 133 // 21 The structure of argumentative RAs in the corpus 144 // 22 Language as the realization of social context 146 // 23 Metafunctions and planes 148 // 24 The ’writer readers linguists/economist’ relationship 174 // 25 Aspects of reference 179 // 26 Generic and non-generic he 182 //
27 Epitfene pronouns in the corpus 190 // 28 Distribution of epicene pronouns in economics and linguistics 190 // 29 Distribution of epicenes by type of antecedent in economics 194 // 30 Distribution of epicenes by type of antecedent in linguistics 195 // 31 Distribution of epicenes by type of antecedent in the corpus 195 // Tables // 1 The composition of the corpus 46 // 2 Frequency of active and passive verbs in the corpus 55 // 3 Logical argument structure in research articles 57 // 4 Active/passive verbs and personal pronouns 79 // 5 Distribution of agentive and non-agentive passives 82 // 6 An extract from the repetition matrix 113 // 7 Quantified links from the repetition matrix 113 // 8 Record of bonding derived from the repetition matrix 114 // 9 Distribution of various types of bonds in RAs 136 // 10 Number of various types of bonds in RAs 137 // 11 The summaries chosen for the analysis 137 // 12 Metafunctions in interaction 148 // 13 Interpersonal macrofunction of self-representation 149 // 14 Frequency of ALL personal pronouns in the corpus 153 // 15 Semantic references of / in The Economic Journal 156 // 16 Semantic references of / in Journal of Linguistics 157 // 17 Semantic references of / in The EJ + JL 157 // 18 Semantic references and rhetorical functions of we in The EJ 159 // 19 Semantic references and rhetorical functions of we in JL 160 // 20 Style-guide recommendations 184 // 21 Epicene trends in both disciplines 197 // 22 Hierarchy of epicene preferences in the data 198
(OCoLC)505914795
cnb002011732

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