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Text Analysis I complete summary ( readings + lectures )

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Complete summary for TAI in CIS1. Cost me blood, sweat, and tears to make.

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Text Analysis I
Main focus:​ Defining characteristics of 'a text', how texts function, and how text ​
​ ​ characteristics cause specific communicative effects

Specifics:​ textual scientific approaches to describe / explain the functioning of texts in ​
​ ​ communicative traffic, discourse analytic approaches

Learning objectives:​
→​ Describe important concepts and theoretical insights in the field of textual studies​
→​ Analyze properties of texts and problems that occur in them using ^​
→​ Use ^^ to make statements about text quality formulate suggestions for improvement

Assessment:​ 100% written digital exam (2h)

Syllabus:​ Text Analysis I 2024-2025 course syllabus.pdf

Literature:​ provided on Brightspace

,Paltridge, Brian ( 2012 ). 'Chapter 4. Discourse and genre' in 'Discourse
analysis: an introduction’ p. 62 - 85
People communicate primarily through genres: ways of using spoken / written discourse to
accomplish tasks & activities that people engage in through language​
~​ recognizable patterns / organization​
​ -​ have distinct structures ( e.g. heading, body, conclusion )​
​ -​ follow conventional patterns that make them identifiable​
~​ context-specific​
​ -​ occur in particular setting / are organized depending on purpose​
~​ distinct function / purpose​
​ -​ specific goal ( e.g. informing, persuading, entertaining )

Types​
~​ written: newspaper reports, academic essays, etc.​
~​ spoken: academic lectures, casual conversations, etc.​
Features​
~​ typical / conventional elements​
​ -​ share common functions / purposes & follow established patterns​
~​ contextual dependence​
​ -​ take place in specific settings ( e.g. university lectures in a lecture hall )​
~​ typical subject matter​
​ -​ association with certain topics ( e.g. lectures discussing course content )

Genres evolve over time due to technological advancements, shifting cultural values etc.

Definition of genre​
I​ a staged, goal-oriented, and social activity:​
​ staged:​ achieving a goal often takes multiple steps​
​ goal-oriented:​ genres help us accomplish tasks​
​ social:​ ​ participation happens within a cultural or social framework​
II​ genres are defined by their function rather than their form:​
​ →​ a genre is recognized based on the action it accomplishes, and over time, ​
​ ​ genres become accepted as conventional ways of doing things

Typification: common patterns and forms that make genres recognizable​
~​ typical content: expected themes, topics, and elements​
~​ typical actions: the function a genre serves ( e.g., informing, entertaining etc. )

Register; specific language features of a text that are shaped by its context​
~​ field – What is happening? ( subject matter / topic )​
~​ tenor – Who is involved? ( relationship between writer and audience )​
~​ mode – How is the text communicated? ( spoken / written, formal / informal )

genre is shaped by cultural context and provides the overall structure of a text ( framework )​
register determines the specific linguistic choices within that genre ( language adaptation )

Genre analysis / English for Specific Purposes ( ESP )​
~​ move analysis; method to examine the discourse structure of texts​
​ -​ genres can have multiple purposes that differ between participants​


1

,​ -​ similar texts may have very different communicative purposes​
​ -​ purpose of genre evolves over time due to cultural / technological changes

Rhetorical Genre Studies ( RGS )​
~​ genres are not just text types; they are tools for communication and action​
~​ genres emerge in response to social needs and guide participation in communities​
~​ genres shape and are shaped by social, cultural, and historical contexts

Choice / constraint in genres​
~​ genres are dynamic / open to change; not a ‘free for all’​
~​ conformity to genre norms is expected, but can be played with​
e.g.​ like playing a game; skilled players manipulate rather than strictly follow conventions

Classification is subjective, but mainly depends on​
~​ author / intended audience​
~​ purpose of the text​
~​ context / setting​
~​ physical form / structure​
~​ level of formality / style

classification can be subjective; different people may categorize the same text differently

Interconnection between genres through:​
~​ genre networks; related genres interacting with one another, nonlinear​
~​ genre chains; structured progression where one genre depends on another​
​ e.g.​ a job interview relies on a CV, a research article follows a proposal, etc.​
~​ genre sets; groups of genres regularly used for specific purposes​
​ e.g.​ emails, meeting agendas, and reports used in workplace communication​
~​ repertoires of genres; full range of genres a person / community regularly engages ​
​ with, shaped by social, institutional, or professional contexts

Genre structures differ across languages and cultures ( contrastive / intercultural rhetoric )

Steps in genre analysis​
I​ Collect samples of the genre​
II​ Review existing research on that genre​
III​ Identify common patterns in structure and language​
IV​ Analyze the context ( who writes it, for whom, and why )​
V​ Examine connections between genres ( how they relate to others )​
VI​ Understand the social & cultural setting of the genre

Teaching / learning genres​
+​ helps students with academic / professional writing​
–​ can be too rigid / limit creativity​
>​ students must learn to adapt genres to different contexts​
>​ teachers have to use flexible approaches / expose students to a wide variety of texts

Applications​
~​ academic writing & metadiscourse ( helps guide readers through a text )​
​ -​ interactivity to connect with readers​



2

, ~​ ethnographic genre analysis ( looks at how genre is shaped by real-world context )​
~​ beyond academia, genre analysis is useful in journalism, law, business etc.

Generic structure: overall form or framework of a text​
~​ skeleton ( fixed format for a specific type of text )​
​ e.g.​ experimental research report generally has sections like introduction,​
​ ​ methods, results, and conclusion​
Rhetorical structure: how content’s organized / presented to achieve specific purpose​
~​ muscles / movement ( how the text develops and conveys meaning )

Problem-solution structure ( research, essays, reports )​
generic:​ introduction → methods → results → discussion → conclusion​
rhetorical:​ situation → problem → solution → evaluation​
Classical argument structure ( persuasive writing, debates, editorials )​
generic:​ introduction → body → conclusion​
rhetorical:​ introduction → narration ( background ) → confirmation ( arguments ) → ​
​ ​ refutation ( counter arguments ) → conclusion​
IMRaD structure ( scientific research papers )​
generic:​ introduction → methods → results → discussion​
rhetorical:​ context → hypothesis → experimentation → interpretation​
Narrative structure ( stories, biographies, literature )​
generic:​ beginning → middle → end​
rhetorical:​ exposition → rising action → climax → falling action → resolution​
Cause-effect structure ( explanatory texts, scientific papers, history writing )​
generic:​ introduction → body → conclusion​
rhetorical:​ cause → effect → analysis → implications​
Compare-contrast structure ( analytical essays, reviews, discussions )​
generic:​ introduction → comparison → contrast → conclusion​
rhetorical:​ subject A → subject B → similarities → differences → synthesis

Paltridge basically gave us 2 main outlooks on genre:​
I​ Rhetorical structure ( Miller )​
​ - focuses on genre as action rather than form​
​ - stresses how texts function in different rhetorical situations​
​ - sees genre as situationally driven / dynamic, rather than fixed​
II​ Generic structure ( Martin )​
​ - views genre as socially constructed ( cultural / institutional )​
​ - recognizes staged structures / formal conventions as key to genres​
​ - focuses on how genres shape meaning-making within communities​
Swales sits in between these two, as he recognizes the communicative purpose of genre​
( Miller ) but also acknowledges structural constraints and shared conventions ( Martin )

So: the differences in the definitions stem from different disciplinary traditions




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