Using corpus results to guide the discourse-based interview: A case study of a student writer’s awareness of stance in philosophical argumentation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17239/jowr-2016.08.01.04Keywords:
discourse-based interviews, corpus linguistics, epistemic stance, hedging, writing in the disciplines (WID)Abstract
Discourse-based interviews (or DBIs) have long been used in writing research to investigate writers’ tacit genre knowledge, including their rhetorical motivations for sentence-level wordings. Meanwhile, researchers in English for Academic and Specific Purposes (EAP/ESP) have used corpus techniques to uncover patterns of such wordings, ones that index community-valued ways of knowing and meaning. This article brings together these two methods in a novel way. By offering a case study of Richard, an advanced undergraduate writer majoring in philosophy at a U.S. university, the article demonstrates how systematic analysis of Richard’s writing informed and enriched DBIs with him and his professor, Maria. Specifically, corpus-based text analysis revealed that Richard regularly expressed an epistemic stance in his course essays in ways that are conventional and valued in philosophical argumentation, while the DBIs revealed that neither Richard nor Maria were consciously aware of these stance patterns, despite regular appearance in both their writing. Taken together, these findings point to the value of using corpus techniques prior to the DBI to identify meaningful choices in language that likely otherwise would be missed. The findings also raise important questions about the acquisition of disciplinary discourses and the sources of knowledge that foster that acquisition.Published
2016-06-15
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Copyright (c) 2016 Zak Lancaster
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 Unported License.
How to Cite
Using corpus results to guide the discourse-based interview: A case study of a student writer’s awareness of stance in philosophical argumentation. (2016). Journal of Writing Research, 8(1), 119-148. https://doi.org/10.17239/jowr-2016.08.01.04