Investigating the discoursal negotiation of identity in academic writing is undoubtedly crucial for the construal of a disciplinary discourse community and ultimately also of professional identity. Besides, the complexity of the investigation of identity in academic writing is also to be expected, given the interaction between writer and reader in the social process of text production/reception (Bakhtin 1981) and the ritualised genre tendency to hide subjective identity behind collective communities, as well as to “downplay” the inter-personal, while “foregrounding complex contents” (Silver 2012: 202). This complexity becomes more intriguing in light of that merging of the subject of writing and the object of research, which may be also typ...