Academic writing conventions in English-medium linguistics journals in Italy: Continuity and change over the last 30 years
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2023
Short description:
Academic writing conventions in English-medium linguistics journals in Italy: Continuity and change over the last 30 years / Bondi, Marina; Nocella, Jessica Jane. - In: TOKEN. - ISSN 2299-5900. - 16:(2023), pp. 55-87. [10.25951/11259]
abstract:
Against the background of studies on “academic Englishes”, this paper is a study parallel
to Dontcheva-Navratilova (this issue). Focusing on the use of English in Italian academic
publishing and on English linguistics in particular, we look at the development of academic
writing conventions in research articles written by Italian scholars over the last 30 years.
The study is based on a small corpus of 20 single-authored English-medium research
articles – ten representing the period from 1990 to1995 and ten from between 2014 and 2019
– published in the official journal of the Italian association of Anglicists (Textus) and in the
applied linguistics journal Rassegna Italiana di Linguistica Italiana (RILA). The study draws
on genre analysis to explore possible changes in rhetorical structure and on corpus analysis
to study forms of self-mention. Special attention is paid to introductions, methodology, and
conclusions. At a macrolevel, results show diachronic changes in rhetorical structure with
a clearer IMRAD structure and a more empirical methodology in the second phase, while
at a microlevel forms of self-mention show a marked increase in non-personal and implicit
(locational) self-mention. This seems to respond to the tension between personal and
impersonal forms that has largely characterized the development of the genre in English as
well as to the contact between different academic cultures.
to Dontcheva-Navratilova (this issue). Focusing on the use of English in Italian academic
publishing and on English linguistics in particular, we look at the development of academic
writing conventions in research articles written by Italian scholars over the last 30 years.
The study is based on a small corpus of 20 single-authored English-medium research
articles – ten representing the period from 1990 to1995 and ten from between 2014 and 2019
– published in the official journal of the Italian association of Anglicists (Textus) and in the
applied linguistics journal Rassegna Italiana di Linguistica Italiana (RILA). The study draws
on genre analysis to explore possible changes in rhetorical structure and on corpus analysis
to study forms of self-mention. Special attention is paid to introductions, methodology, and
conclusions. At a macrolevel, results show diachronic changes in rhetorical structure with
a clearer IMRAD structure and a more empirical methodology in the second phase, while
at a microlevel forms of self-mention show a marked increase in non-personal and implicit
(locational) self-mention. This seems to respond to the tension between personal and
impersonal forms that has largely characterized the development of the genre in English as
well as to the contact between different academic cultures.
Iris type:
Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
academic English, research articles, corpus linguistics, genre analysis
List of contributors:
Bondi, Marina; Nocella, Jessica Jane
Published in: