Show simple item record

Revealing indexicality in situated writing: Negotiating second-language politeness indexes in job application letters: Negotiating second-language politeness indexes in job application letters

dc.creatorDressen-Hammouda, Dacia
dc.date2023-02-13
dc.date.accessioned2023-05-09T18:34:52Z
dc.date.available2023-05-09T18:34:52Z
dc.identifierhttp://ediciones.ucsh.cl/ojs/index.php/lyl/article/view/3140
dc.identifier10.29344/0717621X.46.3140
dc.identifier.urihttps://revistaschilenas.uchile.cl/handle/2250/225463
dc.descriptionWriting proficiently in any language requires knowing about much more than grammar, lexis, register, genres, audience and rhetorical situation. It also requires that writers call upon implicit sociocultural and contextual inferences made via indexes. Indexes convey a wide range of sociocultural information about social background, professional and cultural identity, affective and epistemological positioning, gender and ethnicity. The ways in which this information is indexed, however, can vary significantly from one language to another, making indexicality a significant concern for international writers as they negotiate their positions through writing. This paper describes a novel method in writing research, indexical analysis, which is used to identify how French politeness norms are indexed in application letters written in English by first-language (L1) French students. It was found that although their writing was considered grammatically correct, divergences in terms of where and how politeness was expressed resulted in a negative evaluation by readers. Developing more conscious awareness of the implicit norms that organize thoughts and attitudes for both writers and readers may allow for better recognition of how indexes may differ across languages.en-US
dc.descriptionWriting proficiently in any language requires knowing about much more than grammar, lexis, register, genres, audience and rhetorical situation. It also requires that writers call upon implicit sociocultural and contextual inferences made via indexes. Indexes convey a wide range of sociocultural information about social background, professional and cultural identity, affective and epistemological positioning, gender and ethnicity. The ways in which this information is indexed, however, can vary significantly from one language to another, making indexicality a significant concern for international writers as they negotiate their positions through writing. This paper describes a novel method in writing research, indexical analysis, which is used to describe how French politeness norms are indexed in application letters written in English by first-language (L1) French students. It was found that although the students’ writing was considered grammatically correct, divergences in terms of where and how politeness was expressed resulted in a negative evaluation by readers. Developing more conscious awareness of the implicit norms that organize thoughts and attitudes for both writers and readers may allow for better recognition of how indexes can differ across languages.es-ES
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.languagespa
dc.publisherUniversidad Católica Silva Henrí­quezes-ES
dc.relationhttp://ediciones.ucsh.cl/ojs/index.php/lyl/article/view/3140/2753
dc.rightsDerechos de autor 2023 Literatura y Lingüísticaes-ES
dc.rightshttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0es-ES
dc.sourceLiteratura y Linguí­stica; No. 46 (2022): Literatura y Lingüística; 221-250en-US
dc.sourceLiteratura y Lingüística; Núm. 46 (2022): Literatura y Lingüística; 221-250es-ES
dc.source0717-621X
dc.source0716-5811
dc.subjectindexical analysisen-US
dc.subjectindexicalityen-US
dc.subjectinternational writersen-US
dc.subjectjob application lettersen-US
dc.subjectFrench politeness normsen-US
dc.subjectinter-indexicalityen-US
dc.subjectFrench politeness normses-ES
dc.subjectindexical analysises-ES
dc.subjectindexicalityes-ES
dc.subjectinternational writerses-ES
dc.subjectinter-indexicalityes-ES
dc.subjectjob application letterses-ES
dc.titleRevealing indexicality in specialized writing: Negotiating second-language politeness indexes in job application lettersen-US
dc.titleRevealing indexicality in situated writing: Negotiating second-language politeness indexes in job application letters: Negotiating second-language politeness indexes in job application letterses-ES
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion


This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record