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-List Of Titles -From climate change to deforestation: a genre of popularised science

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/22696

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Title
From climate change to deforestation: a genre of popularised science
Related
Australasian Digital Theses Program
Publisher
Australia : Macquarie University
Date
1999
Author/Creator
Laohawiriyanon, Chonlada
Description
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, School of English, Linguistics and Media, 1999.
Description
Bibliography: p. 299-305.
Description
Introduction -- Theoretical background -- The structure of popular scientific writing on 'climate change' -- Findings of analysis of texts on population growth and deforestation -- Interaction between verbal and visuals representations -- Conclusion.
Description
The topics of climate change, population growth, and deforestation, as discussed in publications such as New Scientist, Discover, Time, and Our Planet, exemplify contemporary writing on science for the general community. As such, it is assumed that they are presented in an objective, scientific, informative way. Furthermore, these topics illustrate what it means to write complex issues in a popular manner. Consequently, they provide an opportunity for examining at least one area of popular science as a generic phenomenon.-- Through an investigation of thirty texts (ten on each of the three topics mentioned), the consistencies and distinctive features of writing on these environmental issues are investigated, in particular using discourse tools drawn from Systemic Functional linguistics. The foremost tools are the proposals concerning GSP (Generic Structure Potential) put forward by Hasan, which provide an outline of the syntagmatic unfolding of a text ("logogenetic perspective") and the four stratal perspective that is illustrated in the work by Halliday and Hasan, in particular as such work relates wording to culture. By assessing the degree to which the thirty texts constitute a genre, and the degree to which they exhibit their own internal variations, it is also possible to clarify Halliday's notion of the 'cline of instantiation' between, at one end, the 'potential/system' and, at the other end, the instance of 'text as process'.-- The investigation reveals that the assumption of an informative, objective style in popular science journal articles actually obscures a deeper underlying activism about the future, but an activism strongly based on only Western perceptions of environmental crisis.
Description
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Description
ix, 305, 217 p. ill. (some col.)
Subject Keyword
English language -- Technical English -- Discourse analysis
Subject Keyword
Discourse analysis
Subject Keyword
Science news
Subject Keyword
Environmental sciences -- Authorship
Resource Type
Thesis PhD
Organisation
Macquarie University. School of English and Linguistics

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/22696
Identifier
1285105
Language
eng
Rights
Copyright disclaimer: http://www.copyright.mq.edu.au
Rights
Copyright Chonlada Laohawiriyanon 1999.
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