Genre analysis of literature research article abstracts: A cross-linguistic, cross-cultural study

Following Swalesâs (1981) works on genre analysis, studies on different sections of Research Articles (RAs) in various languages and fields abound however, only scant attention has been directed toward abstracts written in Persian, and in the field of literature. Moreover, claims made by Lores (2004...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied Research on English Language
Main Authors: Hamideh Marefat, Shirin Mohammadzadeh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Isfahan 2013-07-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://are.ui.ac.ir/article_15469_eb57d34d17992ef62c9616e6a9416788.pdf
Description
Summary:Following Swalesâs (1981) works on genre analysis, studies on different sections of Research Articles (RAs) in various languages and fields abound however, only scant attention has been directed toward abstracts written in Persian, and in the field of literature. Moreover, claims made by Lores (2004) regarding the correspondence of two types of abstracts with different models, and by Martin (2004) concerning the influence of sociocultural factors on the way writers write needed evaluation. To fill this gap, 90 English and Persian abstracts written in the field of literature, by English and Persian native speakers, were analyzed based on the IMRD (Introduction, Method, Results, and Discussion) and CARS (Create A Research Space) models. The results demonstrated that literature RA writers generally focus on Introduction and Results, neglect Method and Discussion, and do not mention the niche in previous related work secondly, although none of the models were efficient, literature abstracts generally matched CARS more than IMRD and thirdly, abstracts written by Persian native speakers had minor deviations from both the Persian and the international norms, and exhibited a standard of their own. The present study also discusses steps which the models fail to predict. In addition, it offers a number of pedagogical implications for TEFL, especially for the writing skill.
ISSN:2252-0198
2322-5343