The aim of this volume is to look into how academic identity is discoursally constructed in CMC (computer-mediated communication), using the example of an e-seminar. An e-seminar is an asynchronous type of CMC, where private, public and institutional domains merge, and therefore it provides an interesting context for exploring academic communication phenomena in cyberspace. The linguistic cues of academic identity can be identified on three levels of discourse organisation: the features of lexico-grammar, textual macrostructures and genres. In general, the analysis shows how these three levels of discourse organisation contribute towards how academics negotiate their identities relative to the aims and activities of their discourse communities and relative to their individual goals. The discoursal construction of academic identity in electronic discourse depends also on such factors as the mediums defining properties and the lack of direct physical contact between interactants. An important finding is the confirmation of the individuating character of the medium: i.e. the authors self-presentation in an e-seminar is characterised by their distinctive voice and increased self-disclosure. Communication in this context enhances individuality, which bears important consequences for how academics negotiate their identity in electronic discourse, exploiting the possibilities offered by the new medium.The results of the analysis reveal how important it is for scholars to maintain a legitimate identity in an e-seminar. Virtual academic identity as constructed in this context is as an extension of academic identity constructed in the real world. The new communicative medium seems to have extended the repertoire of effective means of self-promotion, and the presentation of academic achievements and expertise. These aspects have become important for academic interaction in todays world, which is characterised by such phenomena as the internationalisation and globalisation of scholarship, commodification of science and intensified competition. The book will be of interest to students and researchers in the fields of discourse analysis, academic literacy, rhetoric and genre studies, and to all those concerned with the complexities of identity work in the context of computer-mediated communication.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 148 x 212mm
Publication Date: 08 Dec 2011
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781443834681
About Magorzata SokóMalgorzata Sokol
Magorzata Sokó PhD is Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Szczecin University Poland. Her major fields of professional interest include: computer-mediated communication and computer-mediated discourse analysis professional and institutional discourse analysis genre theory corpus linguistics and recently digital humanities. She has researched into aspects of digital genre development and evolution in professional and organisational communication and investigated patterns of identity construction and evaluative language use in digital genres. She edited Perspectives on Othering and Stereotyping: Language Literature Culture (Szczecin 2010) and co-edited Us and Them Them and Us: Constructions of the Other in Cultural Stereotypes (Shaker Verlag 2011).
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