Description

Book Synopsis

How to Analyse Texts is the essential introductory textbook and toolkit for language analysis. This book shows the reader how to undertake detailed, language-focussed, contextually sensitive analyses of a wide range of texts â spoken, written and multimodal. The book constitutes a flexible resource which can be used in different ways across a range of courses and at different levels.

This textbook includes:

  • three parts covering research and study skills, language structure and use, and how texts operate in sociocultural contexts
  • a wide range of international real-life texts, including items from South China Morning Post, artâotel Berlin and Metro Sweden, which cover digital and print media, advertising, recipes and much more
  • objectives and skill review for each section, activities, commentaries, suggestions for independent assignments, and an analysis checklist for students to follow
  • a combined gloss

    Trade Review

    "Without a doubt the most practical and innovative textbook on text analysis on the market. Not only do Carter and Goddard provide clear explanation of theoretical concepts, but they also provide concrete advice about how to go about the practical work of collecting and analysing a range of different texts. A superb introduction to text analysis for beginning students and a useful resource book for more advanced students and researchers."
    Rodney H. Jones, City University of Hong Kong

    "This user-friendly book covers a wide range of carefully chosen text types and genres, and takes a modern approach to text analysis. How to Analyse Texts is a fantastic resource for students on undergraduate English Language courses."
    Mario Saraceni, University of Portsmouth, UK

    "This is a delightful coursebook marrying the study of a range of modern, multimodal, electronic, creative and ludic texts with the core tools of descriptive linguistics. It shows that multimodal texts can be taken seriously and that English grammar can be fun! The authors have put together a highly useful yet accessible introduction that will serve the next generation of students of media and modern English language very well."
    Rajend Mesthrie, University of Cape Town, South Africa

    "How to Analyse Texts is an impresssive introductory textbook for Communication and Humanities students. It covers all aspects of language studies in an accessible and clear way, guiding students step by step in the intricate processes of understanding and interpreting texts. The latest developments in linguistic/semiotic analyses are extremely well presented and illustrated. Ron Carter and Angela Goddard’s toolkit book is, as they themselves say, ‘to be used’ in real situations and practices. I will certainly use it with my own students."Carmen Rosa Caldas-Coulthard, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil and University of Birmingham, UK


    "Without a doubt the most practical and innovative textbook on text analysis on the market. Not only do Carter and Goddard provide clear explanation of theoretical concepts, but they also provide concrete advice about how to go about the practical work of collecting and analysing a range of different texts. A superb introduction to text analysis for beginning students and a useful resource book for more advanced students and researchers."
    Rodney H. Jones, City University of Hong Kong

    "This user-friendly book covers a wide range of carefully chosen text types and genres, and takes a modern approach to text analysis. How to Analyse Texts is a fantastic resource for students on undergraduate English Language courses."
    Mario Saraceni, University of Portsmouth, UK

    "This is a delightful coursebook marrying the study of a range of modern, multimodal, electronic, creative and ludic texts with the core tools of descriptive linguistics. It shows that multimodal texts can be taken seriously and that English grammar can be fun! The authors have put together a highly useful yet accessible introduction that will serve the next generation of students of media and modern English language very well."
    Rajend Mesthrie, University of Cape Town, South Africa

    "How to Analyse Texts is an impresssive introductory textbook for Communication and Humanities students. It covers all aspects of language studies in an accessible and clear way, guiding students step by step in the intricate processes of understanding and interpreting texts. The latest developments in linguistic/semiotic analyses are extremely well presented and illustrated. Ron Carter and Angela Goddard’s toolkit book is, as they themselves say, ‘to be used’ in real situations and practices. I will certainly use it with my own students."Carmen Rosa Caldas-Coulthard, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil and University of Birmingham, UK

    "How to Analyse Texts provides several reasons for deserving a place of its own among the existing body of literature, owing in particular to the practical nature of the book: more than providing a theoretical description of language use and how texts can be analysed, the book works as a toolkit that provides learners with the tools required to analyse texts, and furthermore shows them how to use those tools. The book therefore aims to encourage an active learning process, whereby practical applications and activities encourage the readers to acquire real analytical skills."

    Rui Sousa-Silva, Centro de Linguística da Universidade do Porto, Portugal



    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgements
    List of Texts
    Part I: Foundations: researching texts
    Part II: Drilling Down: how texts are structured
    Section 1: Graphological and Phonological levels
    Section 2: Lexical and Semantic level
    Section 3: Grammatical level
    Part III: Building Up: Texts and Contexts
    A checklist for text analysis
    Corpus resources and projects
    References
    Links
    Further reading
    Glossary and Index

How to Analyse Texts

    Product form

    £36.99

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Wed 10 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Ronald Carter, Angela Goddard

    1 in stock


      View other formats and editions of How to Analyse Texts by Ronald Carter

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis
      Publication Date: 8/25/2015 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780415836807, 978-0415836807
      ISBN10: 0415836808

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      How to Analyse Texts is the essential introductory textbook and toolkit for language analysis. This book shows the reader how to undertake detailed, language-focussed, contextually sensitive analyses of a wide range of texts â spoken, written and multimodal. The book constitutes a flexible resource which can be used in different ways across a range of courses and at different levels.

      This textbook includes:

      • three parts covering research and study skills, language structure and use, and how texts operate in sociocultural contexts
      • a wide range of international real-life texts, including items from South China Morning Post, artâotel Berlin and Metro Sweden, which cover digital and print media, advertising, recipes and much more
      • objectives and skill review for each section, activities, commentaries, suggestions for independent assignments, and an analysis checklist for students to follow
      • a combined gloss

        Trade Review

        "Without a doubt the most practical and innovative textbook on text analysis on the market. Not only do Carter and Goddard provide clear explanation of theoretical concepts, but they also provide concrete advice about how to go about the practical work of collecting and analysing a range of different texts. A superb introduction to text analysis for beginning students and a useful resource book for more advanced students and researchers."
        Rodney H. Jones, City University of Hong Kong

        "This user-friendly book covers a wide range of carefully chosen text types and genres, and takes a modern approach to text analysis. How to Analyse Texts is a fantastic resource for students on undergraduate English Language courses."
        Mario Saraceni, University of Portsmouth, UK

        "This is a delightful coursebook marrying the study of a range of modern, multimodal, electronic, creative and ludic texts with the core tools of descriptive linguistics. It shows that multimodal texts can be taken seriously and that English grammar can be fun! The authors have put together a highly useful yet accessible introduction that will serve the next generation of students of media and modern English language very well."
        Rajend Mesthrie, University of Cape Town, South Africa

        "How to Analyse Texts is an impresssive introductory textbook for Communication and Humanities students. It covers all aspects of language studies in an accessible and clear way, guiding students step by step in the intricate processes of understanding and interpreting texts. The latest developments in linguistic/semiotic analyses are extremely well presented and illustrated. Ron Carter and Angela Goddard’s toolkit book is, as they themselves say, ‘to be used’ in real situations and practices. I will certainly use it with my own students."Carmen Rosa Caldas-Coulthard, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil and University of Birmingham, UK


        "Without a doubt the most practical and innovative textbook on text analysis on the market. Not only do Carter and Goddard provide clear explanation of theoretical concepts, but they also provide concrete advice about how to go about the practical work of collecting and analysing a range of different texts. A superb introduction to text analysis for beginning students and a useful resource book for more advanced students and researchers."
        Rodney H. Jones, City University of Hong Kong

        "This user-friendly book covers a wide range of carefully chosen text types and genres, and takes a modern approach to text analysis. How to Analyse Texts is a fantastic resource for students on undergraduate English Language courses."
        Mario Saraceni, University of Portsmouth, UK

        "This is a delightful coursebook marrying the study of a range of modern, multimodal, electronic, creative and ludic texts with the core tools of descriptive linguistics. It shows that multimodal texts can be taken seriously and that English grammar can be fun! The authors have put together a highly useful yet accessible introduction that will serve the next generation of students of media and modern English language very well."
        Rajend Mesthrie, University of Cape Town, South Africa

        "How to Analyse Texts is an impresssive introductory textbook for Communication and Humanities students. It covers all aspects of language studies in an accessible and clear way, guiding students step by step in the intricate processes of understanding and interpreting texts. The latest developments in linguistic/semiotic analyses are extremely well presented and illustrated. Ron Carter and Angela Goddard’s toolkit book is, as they themselves say, ‘to be used’ in real situations and practices. I will certainly use it with my own students."Carmen Rosa Caldas-Coulthard, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil and University of Birmingham, UK

        "How to Analyse Texts provides several reasons for deserving a place of its own among the existing body of literature, owing in particular to the practical nature of the book: more than providing a theoretical description of language use and how texts can be analysed, the book works as a toolkit that provides learners with the tools required to analyse texts, and furthermore shows them how to use those tools. The book therefore aims to encourage an active learning process, whereby practical applications and activities encourage the readers to acquire real analytical skills."

        Rui Sousa-Silva, Centro de Linguística da Universidade do Porto, Portugal



        Table of Contents

        Acknowledgements
        List of Texts
        Part I: Foundations: researching texts
        Part II: Drilling Down: how texts are structured
        Section 1: Graphological and Phonological levels
        Section 2: Lexical and Semantic level
        Section 3: Grammatical level
        Part III: Building Up: Texts and Contexts
        A checklist for text analysis
        Corpus resources and projects
        References
        Links
        Further reading
        Glossary and Index

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