Talking to the Academy
- 1 April 1996
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Written Communication
- Vol. 13 (2) , 251-281
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0741088396013002004
Abstract
Student writing in history courses, graded evaluation of that writing, and faculty interviews all reveal a contradiction between the stated and implicit aims of historical discourse. The explicit definition of writing in history is “argumentation”; the implicit expectation, however, is for narrative. This apparent contradiction highlights what the author argues is the central function of academic historical discourse: the establishment of an autonomous subject of meaning who is always speaking from outside history about a distant and objectified past. Students are rarely aware of the importance of this voice, even at an unconscious level, because faculty themselves fail to articulate for students the distinctive nature of their genre or the function of historical discourse generally. This project thus builds on previous studies in rhetoric by using the work of theorists of history to identify more precisely what it is in historical discourse that is hidden from student view—the autonomous, transhistorical voice.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Arguing for Experimental “Facts” in ScienceWritten Communication, 1993
- Constituency, multi-functionality and grammaticalization in Halliday's Functional GrammarJournal of Linguistics, 1988
- EPISTEMIC MODALITY AND SPOKEN DISCOURSETransactions of the Philological Society, 1987
- “Something on the order of around forty to forty-four”: Imprecise numerical expressions in biomedical slide talksLanguage in Society, 1987
- Verb form and rhetorical function in science writing: A study of MS theses in biology, chemistry, and physicsThe ESP Journal, 1985
- Texts as Knowledge Claims: The Social Construction of Two Biology ArticlesSocial Studies of Science, 1985
- Purposive vagueness: an evaluative dimension of vague quantifying expressionsJournal of Linguistics, 1985
- Some Exploratory Discourse on MetadiscourseCollege Composition and Communication, 1985
- Modifying illocutionary forceJournal of Pragmatics, 1984
- Talking scienceNature, 1983