Description

Book Synopsis
This study is a linguistic analysis of the first two academic periodicals from their creation in 1665 until the end of the seventeenth century. These were Le Journal des Scavans in France and the Philosophical Transactions in England. The analysis is carried out within the framework of Systemic Functional Linguistics. The linguistic features and aspects of the theory necessary for understanding the rest of the book are explained, and the historical situation is described in order to place the texts in the context from which they derived. The corpus is made up of a selection of issues for the years 1665, 1675, 1685 and 1694/5, totalling over 66,000 words for Le Journal des Scavans, and over 77,000 words for the Philosophical Transactions. Thematic structure and progression, types of process, expressions of modality, and nominalised processes are studied in each of the periodicals and the results compared. It is shown that differences in the results for the two journals derive from differing editorial decisions, which themselves are engendered by the historical context.

Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Getting Things Started: By Way of Introduction Chapter 2: Linguistic Background Chapter 3: Historical Background Chapter 4: The Documents to be Used: A Corpus Chapter 5: Thematic Structure: A Starting Point Chapter 6: Transitivity: Actions, Events, States Chapter 7: Modality: Possibility, Ability, Obligation Chapter 8: Nominalization: Reifying Processes Chapter 9: Winding Up and Winding Down: By Way of Conclusion

The Birth of the Academic Article: Le Journal des Scavans and the Philosophical Transactions, 1665-1700

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      View other formats and editions of The Birth of the Academic Article: Le Journal des Scavans and the Philosophical Transactions, 1665-1700 by David Banks

      Publisher: Equinox Publishing Ltd
      Publication Date: 25/07/2019
      ISBN13: 9781781798300, 978-1781798300
      ISBN10: 1781798303

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This study is a linguistic analysis of the first two academic periodicals from their creation in 1665 until the end of the seventeenth century. These were Le Journal des Scavans in France and the Philosophical Transactions in England. The analysis is carried out within the framework of Systemic Functional Linguistics. The linguistic features and aspects of the theory necessary for understanding the rest of the book are explained, and the historical situation is described in order to place the texts in the context from which they derived. The corpus is made up of a selection of issues for the years 1665, 1675, 1685 and 1694/5, totalling over 66,000 words for Le Journal des Scavans, and over 77,000 words for the Philosophical Transactions. Thematic structure and progression, types of process, expressions of modality, and nominalised processes are studied in each of the periodicals and the results compared. It is shown that differences in the results for the two journals derive from differing editorial decisions, which themselves are engendered by the historical context.

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1: Getting Things Started: By Way of Introduction Chapter 2: Linguistic Background Chapter 3: Historical Background Chapter 4: The Documents to be Used: A Corpus Chapter 5: Thematic Structure: A Starting Point Chapter 6: Transitivity: Actions, Events, States Chapter 7: Modality: Possibility, Ability, Obligation Chapter 8: Nominalization: Reifying Processes Chapter 9: Winding Up and Winding Down: By Way of Conclusion

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