ABSTRACT This study examines the use of author self-reference, but pronouns, in the form of third person point of view in academic writing. The data for analysis were retrieved from C-SMILE (Corpus of State University of Malang Indonesian Learners' English), which consisted of 124 theses and 138 research articles of EFL learners, who were undergraduate students of the Department of English, State University of Malang. Results demonstrated abundant uses of the researcher as author self-reference. This leads to the possibility to expand the notion of ventriloquizing drawn on spoken discourse for application into written discourse. We hypothetically believe that ventriloquizing, which occurs in academic writing, has a strong relation with...
Authorial identity construction is one of many professional rhetorical strategies employed by author...
One of the most controversial inquiries in academic writing is whether it is admissible to use first...
The writers of any scientific community are inherently expected to fulfil some agreed-upon discourse...
Academic writing is not just about conveying an ideational 'content', it is also about the represent...
Expressing an authoritative voice is an essential part of academic writing at university. However, t...
The paper offers a report of a small-scale corpus investigation into some advanced EFL learners’ use...
The need to establish an authorial identity in academic discourse has been considered to be critical...
Research in academic writing initially focuses on the output of writing, but it is now increasingly ...
This study examines discussions of model papers in a high school Advanced Placement English classroo...
During the last few decades there has been a growing interest in academic discourse as well as in wr...
Some researchers have argued that voice is irrelevant to academic writing and that the importance of...
This study examined authorial voices in journal articles written by authors from different cultural ...
In this paper, I examine the view that research writing is a modest, self-effacing task which involv...
ABSTRACT: Novice researchers are expected to participate through writing in the particular discourse...
This paper investigates the expression of authorial identity in English published research articles ...
Authorial identity construction is one of many professional rhetorical strategies employed by author...
One of the most controversial inquiries in academic writing is whether it is admissible to use first...
The writers of any scientific community are inherently expected to fulfil some agreed-upon discourse...
Academic writing is not just about conveying an ideational 'content', it is also about the represent...
Expressing an authoritative voice is an essential part of academic writing at university. However, t...
The paper offers a report of a small-scale corpus investigation into some advanced EFL learners’ use...
The need to establish an authorial identity in academic discourse has been considered to be critical...
Research in academic writing initially focuses on the output of writing, but it is now increasingly ...
This study examines discussions of model papers in a high school Advanced Placement English classroo...
During the last few decades there has been a growing interest in academic discourse as well as in wr...
Some researchers have argued that voice is irrelevant to academic writing and that the importance of...
This study examined authorial voices in journal articles written by authors from different cultural ...
In this paper, I examine the view that research writing is a modest, self-effacing task which involv...
ABSTRACT: Novice researchers are expected to participate through writing in the particular discourse...
This paper investigates the expression of authorial identity in English published research articles ...
Authorial identity construction is one of many professional rhetorical strategies employed by author...
One of the most controversial inquiries in academic writing is whether it is admissible to use first...
The writers of any scientific community are inherently expected to fulfil some agreed-upon discourse...