Title of article :
Appraisal Resources in Book Reviews: A Study of Cross-Gender Variations
Author/Authors :
Hashemi, Ali Department of English Language and Literature - Yazd University - Yazd, Iran , Mahdavirad, Fatemeh Department of English Language and Literature - Yazd University - Yazd, Iran , Mazdayasna, Golnar Department of English Language and Literature - Yazd University - Yazd, Iran
Abstract :
Writing a book review is an instance of evaluative academic writing where the writer is involved in an interaction with the author and the reader, evaluates the viewpoints stated in the book and voices
his own position and stance in a dialogue with the reader. Working within the framework of Martin and White’s (2005) Appraisal Theory as an effective tool for studying the essential resources
employed in this interaction and evaluation, the present study
examined 60 book reviews from the Humanities academic journals
written by native male and female writers, and tried to investigate
the type and frequency of the three Appraisal categories (Attitude,
Engagement, Graduation). The findings indicate that both writer
groups made extensive use of these resources in their writings.
However, the male book review writers exceeded the female writers
in all the three categories. In addition, the Attitude resources were
used the most and The Engagement resources were the least
employed resources. The implications of the study for teaching
writing skills and developing materials and tasks for writing courses at academic levels are mentioned in detail.
Keywords :
Appraisal theory , Book review , Humanities , Gender , Native writer
Journal title :
Journal of English Language Teaching and Learning