Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien. This book explores the property of co-reference within various texts as a possible means of distinguishing genre types. Based on observed rather than invented material, it supplies empirical data on co-reference as a cohesive mechanism within authentic English texts. Co-referential form and frequency are identified in nine texts representing three genres: academic journals, news magazine articles and fictional narrative texts. This study offers not only quantitative but also qualitative information regarding co-reference in three individual text types, thereby laying the foundation for a comparative study of the three different genres. Focusing on the property of co-reference in this way singles out differences in language use and allows for some pertinent statements to be made regarding modes of co-reference as an indicator of text variety. Contents: Study of one aspect of text cohesion: co-reference - Definition of co-reference - Study of the modes of co-reference - Co-reference as a text-distinguishing language feature - Genre characteristics - Co-reference linked to language use - Language variation - Use of anaphora versus cataphora - Definition and identification of referent types - Systemic-functional linguistic approach as applied to co-reference - Influence of register variables (field, mode, and tenor) on co-reference - Quantitative and qualitative similarities and differences concerning use of co-reference in different text types.
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Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Oxford, Wien. This book explores the property of co-reference within various texts as a possible means of distinguishing genre types. Based on observed rather than invented material, it supplies empirical data on co-reference as a cohesive mechanism within authentic English texts. Co-referential form and frequency are identified in nine texts representing three genres: academic journals, news magazine articles and fictional narrative texts. This study offers not only quantitative but also qualitative information regarding co-reference in three individual text types, thereby laying the foundation for a comparative study of the three different genres. Focusing on the property of co-reference in this way singles out differences in language use and allows for some pertinent statements to be made regarding modes of co-reference as an indicator of text variety. Contents: Study of one aspect of text cohesion: co-reference - Definition of co-reference - Study of the modes of co-reference - Co-reference as a text-distinguishing language feature - Genre characteristics - Co-reference linked to language use - Language variation - Use of anaphora versus cataphora - Definition and identification of referent types - Systemic-functional linguistic approach as applied to co-reference - Influence of register variables (field, mode, and tenor) on co-reference - Quantitative and qualitative similarities and differences concerning use of co-reference in different text types.
Maurizio Gotti is Professor of English Linguistics and Director of the Research Centre on Specialized Languages (CERLIS) at the University of Bergamo. His main research areas are the features and origins of specialized discourse. He is a member of the editorial board of national and international journals, and edits the Linguistic Insights series for Peter Lang.
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