Research seminar by Dr Christoph Hafner
Event Date
Monday, September 24, 2018 - 11:00
Event Location
English Department Meeting Room, M8015, Level 8, Run Run Shaw Creative Media Centre
Genre innovation and multimodal expression in scholarly communication: Video methods articles in experimental biology
Digital media have the potential to foster genre innovation and change in scholarly communication, by 1) opening up new, diversified audiences to academics, and 2) facilitating the use of a range of multimodal semiotic resources, that combine word and image, in academic writing. However, relatively little applied linguistic research has investigated innovation in research genres, especially high stakes genres like the research article. In addition, some of the existing literature on the topic has concluded that the addition of digital elements to research articles (for example, embedded video) fails to add significant meaning to the genre, perhaps indicating a poor match between the affordances of digital media and the communicative purposes of the academic writers. This exploratory study provides a multi-dimensional genre analysis of a new research genre in the field of science: the video methods article (VMA), published online by the Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE). In order to understand the intertextual communicative context of this genre, community documents were reviewed and two specialist informants were interviewed. A sample of eleven VMAs from JoVE, one per year of publication from 2006-2016, was examined. The multimodal analysis shows how the VMA genre draws on the affordances of digital video in order to meet the genuine needs of academic writers. The findings also show some innovation and development in the genre over time, which moves through an initial period of experimentation before settling on a stable generic structure.
Christoph A. Hafner is Associate Professor in the Department of English, City University of Hong Kong. He has published widely in the areas of English for specific purposes, digital literacies, and language learning and technology. His latest book, English in the Disciplines: A multidimensional model for ESP course design (with Lindsay Miller) has just been published with Routledge.
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