Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/123574
Título: Contrastive relational markers in women’s expository writing in nineteenth-century English
Autores/as: Sánchez Cuervo, Margarita Esther 
Clasificación UNESCO: 5701 Lingüística aplicada
630909 Posición social de la mujer
Palabras clave: Opposition
Contrastive
Concessive
Corrective
Antithesis
Fecha de publicación: 2023
Proyectos: PID2021-125928NB-I00
Los Mecanismos Interpersonales en Los Textos Instructivos Especializados, Domésticosy No Domésticos, Escritos Por Mujeres en Inglés Moderno 
Publicación seriada: Language value 
Resumen: This study seeks to analyse the occurrence of contrastive relational markers in a corpus of recipes called Corpus of Women’s Instructive Texts in English, the 19th century sub-corpus (COWITE19). Opposition relations, also referred to as adversative or contrastive, are usually identified with markers such as “but”, “although”, and “however”. From a semantic point of view, a classification of these relations can be established into contrast, concession, and corrective, based on their linguistic evidence, lexical differences and syntactic behaviour (Izutsu, 2008). A further rhetorical function is antithesis, presented as a consistent device possessed of a verbal, analytical and persuasive nature (Fahnestock, 1999). The analysis of these markers is made following a computerised corpus analysis methodology and tries to discern which contrastive markers are mostly employed for the instructions conveyed by females. It also shows which opposition relation is predominant, whether contrastive, concessive, or corrective and, finally, it detects antithesis as an additional opposing meaning. In all cases, the possible argumentative role of these markers is highlighted as another step in the characterisation of women’s scientific writing.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/123574
ISSN: 1989-7103
DOI: 10.6035/languagev.7228
Fuente: Language Value [1989-7103], 16(1), p. 42-67
Colección:Artículos
Adobe PDF (452,14 kB)
Vista completa

Google ScholarTM

Verifica

Altmetric


Comparte



Exporta metadatos



Los elementos en ULPGC accedaCRIS están protegidos por derechos de autor con todos los derechos reservados, a menos que se indique lo contrario.