The expression of authority by means of first-person pronouns in Academic Discourse has long been a controversial issue. Traditionally, impersonality was said to be one of the core characteristics of expert writing; However, recent approaches towards the discipline refute that idea and consider the presence of the author in a text a key point in the gaining of academic recognition. Different factors such as the discipline the writer belongs to or the sociocultural context they have been raised in or are currently writing in have proven to be crucial in determining how a writer expresses their authority in a text. This, together with emerging studies that show significant differences in writing between genders, suggest that men and women sch...
One of the most controversial inquiries in academic writing is whether it is admissible to use first...
Academic writing has been recently defined as a social activity in disciplinary communities and cult...
L2 writers likely perceive “good academic writing” as impersonal (Hyland, 2002; Shen, 1989; Tang...
The current study investigates the establishment of the author’s stance towards writing through the ...
Academic writing is not just about conveying an ideational 'content', it is also about the represent...
During the last few decades there has been a growing interest in academic discourse as well as in wr...
Abstract—There are different approaches that study the representation of identity and interaction in...
Academic writing has a set of rules that everyone in academia follows. One of these set rules is re...
Scientific discourse is usually thought to be impersonal. In fact, most style manuals encourage acad...
[Abstract] This paper aims at presenting a portrait of late Modern English scientific writing by stu...
Several studies have shown that women tend to use more personal pronouns and therefore show more inv...
This study contributes to the growing body of research on gender and writing and extends previous re...
Scientific writing is traditionally thought to be impersonal. Therefore, it is not surprising for ac...
This paper explores differences between male and female writing in a large subset of the British Nat...
The first person pronoun plays an important role in identity construction, however, there is few stu...
One of the most controversial inquiries in academic writing is whether it is admissible to use first...
Academic writing has been recently defined as a social activity in disciplinary communities and cult...
L2 writers likely perceive “good academic writing” as impersonal (Hyland, 2002; Shen, 1989; Tang...
The current study investigates the establishment of the author’s stance towards writing through the ...
Academic writing is not just about conveying an ideational 'content', it is also about the represent...
During the last few decades there has been a growing interest in academic discourse as well as in wr...
Abstract—There are different approaches that study the representation of identity and interaction in...
Academic writing has a set of rules that everyone in academia follows. One of these set rules is re...
Scientific discourse is usually thought to be impersonal. In fact, most style manuals encourage acad...
[Abstract] This paper aims at presenting a portrait of late Modern English scientific writing by stu...
Several studies have shown that women tend to use more personal pronouns and therefore show more inv...
This study contributes to the growing body of research on gender and writing and extends previous re...
Scientific writing is traditionally thought to be impersonal. Therefore, it is not surprising for ac...
This paper explores differences between male and female writing in a large subset of the British Nat...
The first person pronoun plays an important role in identity construction, however, there is few stu...
One of the most controversial inquiries in academic writing is whether it is admissible to use first...
Academic writing has been recently defined as a social activity in disciplinary communities and cult...
L2 writers likely perceive “good academic writing” as impersonal (Hyland, 2002; Shen, 1989; Tang...