Publications
Publication details [#48371]
Connor, Ulla, Ed Nagelhout and William Rozycki, eds. 2008. Contrastive Rhetoric. Reaching to intercultural rhetoric. (Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 169). John Benjamins. viii+324 pp.
Publication type
Book – edited volume
Publication language
English
Keywords
Language as a subject
Annotation
This volume explores contrastive rhetoric for audiences in both ESL contexts and international EFL contexts, exposing the newest developments in theories of culture and discourse and pushing the boundaries beyond any previously staked ground. The book presents a comprehensive set of empirical investigations involving a number of first languages; 13 of the 17 authors are English-as-a-second-language speakers, many working in non-US contexts. This work develops a coherent agenda for contrastive rhetoric researchers, studying genres such as school writing, grant proposals, business letters, newspaper editorials, book reviews, and newspaper commentaries. Four chapters provide ethnographies and observations about contrastive rhetoric and the teaching of EFL and ESL. The book ends with a look to the future, suggesting it is more accurate to use the term ‘intercultural rhetoric’ to account for the richness of rhetoric variation of written texts and the varying contexts in which they are constructed.
Articles in this volume
Li, Xiaoming. From contrastive rhetoric to intercultural rhetoric: A search for collective identity. 11–24
Ädel, Annelie. Metadiscourse across three varieties of English: American, British, and advanced learner English. 45–62
Wolfe, Maria Loukianenko. Different cultures – different discourses? Rhetorical patterns of business letters by English and Russian speakers. 87–121
Moreno, Ana I. and Lorena Suárez. The rhetorical structure of academic book reviews of literature: An English-Spanish cross-linguistic approach. 147–168
Wang, Wei. Newspaper commentaries on terrorism in China and Australia: A contrastive genre study. 169–191
LoCastro, Virginia. "Long sentences and floating commas": Mexican students' rhetorical practices and the sociocultural context. 195–217
McBride, Kara. English web page use in an EFL setting: A contrastive rhetoric view of the development of information literacy. 219–240
You, Xiaoye. From Confucianism to Marxism: A century of theme treatment in Chinese writing instruction. 241–256