Authorial voice in Q1 linguistics and hard science journals: a corpus-based comparative study of stance, engagement, and genre conventions

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Titel: Authorial voice in Q1 linguistics and hard science journals: a corpus-based comparative study of stance, engagement, and genre conventions
Autoren: Dalia M. Hamed, Naif Alqurashi
Quelle: Cogent Arts & Humanities, Vol 12, Iss 1 (2025)
Verlagsinformationen: Informa UK Limited, 2025.
Publikationsjahr: 2025
Schlagwörter: interpersonal metadiscourse, disciplinary identity, Fine Arts, Arts in general, Epistemic regimes, NX1-820, General Works, rhetorical variation, AZ20-999, genre-based pedagogy, Cognitive Science, History of scholarship and learning. The humanities
Beschreibung: This study offers a corpus-based comparative analysis of authorial voice in Q1 linguistics and hard science journal articles, examining how stance, engagement, and genre conventions are shaped by disciplinary epistemologies and rhetorical norms. Drawing on Hyland’s stance and engagement model and Swales’s genre theory, the research analyzes 100 IMRAD-structured articles across two corpora totaling over one million tokens. Quantitative frequency analysis and qualitative discourse examination reveal striking disciplinary asymmetries. Linguistics articles exhibit greater rhetorical density and interpersonal alignment, marked by extensive use of self-mention, hedges, boosters, directives, and reader pronouns—constructing a reflexive, dialogic authorial identity. In contrast, hard science writing is characterized by evidential saturation, procedural detachment, and epistemic restraint, foregrounding authorial effacement and methodological fidelity. Genre analysis shows linguistics favors pronounced gap-identification and metadiscursive commentary, while hard sciences adhere to compressed, data-driven exposition. Q1 journal conventions function as discursive gatekeepers, regulating authorial visibility in alignment with field-specific communicative values. The study reconceptualizes authorial voice as a genre-bound, ideologically embedded construct shaped by disciplinary traditions and institutional expectations. Implications are drawn for genre-based writing pedagogy and for understanding voice as a regulated performance of academic identity and epistemic legitimacy.
Publikationsart: Article
Other literature type
Sprache: English
ISSN: 2331-1983
DOI: 10.1080/23311983.2025.2528918
DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.29606040
DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.29606040.v1
Zugangs-URL: https://doaj.org/article/794e4b7f37f1417c8bf1817935a5651f
Rights: CC BY
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi.dedup.....c32307cfabcbd5af68a971c80d143348
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:This study offers a corpus-based comparative analysis of authorial voice in Q1 linguistics and hard science journal articles, examining how stance, engagement, and genre conventions are shaped by disciplinary epistemologies and rhetorical norms. Drawing on Hyland’s stance and engagement model and Swales’s genre theory, the research analyzes 100 IMRAD-structured articles across two corpora totaling over one million tokens. Quantitative frequency analysis and qualitative discourse examination reveal striking disciplinary asymmetries. Linguistics articles exhibit greater rhetorical density and interpersonal alignment, marked by extensive use of self-mention, hedges, boosters, directives, and reader pronouns—constructing a reflexive, dialogic authorial identity. In contrast, hard science writing is characterized by evidential saturation, procedural detachment, and epistemic restraint, foregrounding authorial effacement and methodological fidelity. Genre analysis shows linguistics favors pronounced gap-identification and metadiscursive commentary, while hard sciences adhere to compressed, data-driven exposition. Q1 journal conventions function as discursive gatekeepers, regulating authorial visibility in alignment with field-specific communicative values. The study reconceptualizes authorial voice as a genre-bound, ideologically embedded construct shaped by disciplinary traditions and institutional expectations. Implications are drawn for genre-based writing pedagogy and for understanding voice as a regulated performance of academic identity and epistemic legitimacy.
ISSN:23311983
DOI:10.1080/23311983.2025.2528918