ABSTRACT

Academic Discourse and Global Publishing offers a coherent argument for changes in published academic writing over the past 50 years. Demonstrating how published writing represents academics’ decisions about how best to present their work, their readers and themselves in the global context of a rapidly shifting university system, this book provides:

  • An up-to-date reference on contemporary topics in specialist discourse analysis, current research methodologies and innovative approaches to the study of writing;
  • New insights into conceptual and theoretical issues related to the analysis of academic writing;
  • An accessible introduction to diachronic research in EAP and a case for the value of the diachronic study of texts using corpus techniques;
  • A clear overview of how texts work in interaction and how they relate to evolving institutional and political contexts;
  • Links between the practices of different disciplines and the environments in which they operate, as well as observations on the ways in which they differ.

This volume is essential reading for students and researchers of EAP/ESP and Applied Linguistics and will also be of significant interest to academics and students looking to have their work published.

part I|2 pages

Academic discourse and rhetorical change

chapter 1|18 pages

Publish and prosper

2The changing face of academic life

chapter 2|14 pages

Understanding language change

Corpora, contexts and rhetoric

part II|2 pages

Changes in argument patterns

chapter 3|18 pages

A multidimensional analysis of change

chapter 4|16 pages

Changes in cohesion and coherence

Let’s look at this

chapter 5|20 pages

Points of reference

Changing patterns of citation

chapter 6|16 pages

Changes in self-citation

Cumulative inquiry or self-promotion?

chapter 7|20 pages

Bundling up

Changes in multi-word combinations

part III|2 pages

Changes in stance and engagement

chapter 8|18 pages

Evidentiality, affect and presence

128Changing patterns of stance

chapter 9|21 pages

Changes in a stance marker

Evaluative that

chapter 10|24 pages

Representing readers: changes in engagement

chapter 11|15 pages

Changes in the rhetorical self

A profile of we

chapter 12|18 pages

Is academic writing becoming more informal?

part IV|2 pages

Epilogue

chapter 13|6 pages

Pulling it all together