Genre Knowledge in Disciplinary Communication

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A01=Carol Berkenkotter
A01=Thomas N. Huckin
academic literacy practices
albicans
Argumentative Discussion
article
Author_Carol Berkenkotter
Author_Thomas N. Huckin
candida
Category=CFB
Category=GTC
center
cognitive approaches to genre learning
community
Curriculum Genres
disciplinary writing analysis
discourse
Discourse Community's Norms
Discourse Demonstratives
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethnographic research methods
experimental
Genre Knowledge
Illocutionary Act
Indirect Speech Act
National Academy
Older Fields
Peer Review
phony
Phony Story
Portfolio Evaluation
Primary Speech Genre
professional language use
Program Chair
Reader Oriented Theory
Rhetoric Program
Rosenblatt's Work
scientific communication studies
Scientific Journal Articles
Scientific Publication System
sociocognitive linguistics
Special Topoi
story
TNF Antibody
TNF Production
Validated Knowledge Claims
Van Eemeren
writing
Writing Center

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805816129
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Nov 1994
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Although genre studies abound in literary criticism, researchers and scholars interested in the social contexts of literacy have recently become interested in the dynamic, rhetorical dimensions of speech genres. Within this burgeoning scholarly community, the authors are among the first researchers working within social science traditions to study genre from the perspective of the implicit knowledge of language users. Thus, this is the first sociocognitive study of genre using case-study, naturalistic research methods combined with the techniques of rhetorical and discourse analysis. The term "genre knowledge" refers to an individual's repertoire of situationally appropriate responses to recurrent situations -- from immediate encounters to distanced communication through the medium of print, and more recently, the electronic media. One way to study the textual character of disciplinary knowledge is to examine both the situated actions of writers, and the communicative systems in which disciplinary actors participate. These two perspectives are presented in this book.

The authors' studies of disciplinary communication examine operations of systems as diverse as peer review in scientific publications and language in a first grade science classroom. The methods used include case study and ethnographic techniques, rhetorical and discourse analysis of changing features within large corpora and in the texts of individual writers. Through the use of these techniques, the authors engaged in both micro-level and macro-level analyses and developed a perspective which reflects both foci. From this perspective they propose that what micro-level studies of actors' situated actions frequently depict as individual processes, can also be interpreted -- from the macro-level -- as communicative acts within a discursive network or system.

The research methods and the theoretical framework presented are designed to raise provocative questions for scholars, researchers, and teachers in a number of fields: linguists who teach and conduct research in ESP and LSP and are interested in methods for studying professional communication; scholars in the fields of communication, rhetoric, and sociology of science with an interest in the textual dynamics of scientific and scholarly communities; educational researchers interested in cognition in context; and composition scholars interested in writing in the disciplines.

Berkenkotter, Carol; Huckin, Thomas N.

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