Authorial voice in academic writing
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Keywords

authorial voice
academic writing
English Literature
Computer Science
journal articles
voz del autor
escritura académica
Literatura inglesa
Informática
artículos de investigación.

How to Cite

Cheung, Y. L., & Lau, L. (2020). Authorial voice in academic writing: A comparative study of journal articles in English literature and computer science . Ibérica, (39), 215–242. https://doi.org/10.17398/2340-2784.39.215

Abstract

Academic writers represent themselves in their texts in different ways, notably through use of first person pronouns to construct an authorial voice and enhance arguments. This study examines how expert writers in the disciplines of Literature and Computer Science use first person pronouns. The hypothesis is that in the absence of objective fact, Literature writers resort to frequent use of first person pronouns backed by stronger authorial roles to build credibility and convince readers, while Computer Science writers avoid first person pronouns in line with conventional wisdom in the hard sciences. The findings suggest that the general dichotomy between hard and soft sciences regarding first person pronouns usage may not apply in all cases. Our study discusses the similarities and differences in the disciplinary conventions in Literature and Computer Science, thus making contributions towards pedagogy and scholarship of the role of first person pronouns in voice construction in academic texts
https://doi.org/10.17398/2340-2784.39.215
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Copyright (c) 2020 Yin Ling Cheung, Louwena Lau

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