Publication | Open Access
Textual and interpersonal differences between a news report and an editorial
32
Citations
6
References
2007
Year
Pragmatic AnalysisSystemic Functional LinguisticsRhetoricCommunicationMedia StudiesJournalismInteractive JournalismApplied LinguisticsConstructive JournalismDiscourse AnalysisCorpus AnalysisLanguage StudiesNews SemanticsContent AnalysisPrinciple Of CompositionalityPragmaticsEditorial IndependenceInterpersonal PragmaticPhilosophy Of LanguageNews ReportDiscourse StructureTextual AdjunctsInterpersonal DifferencesRhetorical TheoryArtsLinguistics
While news reports and editorials may center on very similar experiential content, obviously, their purposes are very different: to inform in the case of the report, and to argue for a particular line of thought on a given situation in the editorial. This paper demonstrates how systemic functional linguistics (SFL) can highlight just how these different ends are achieved linguistically, focusing on the textual meta-function through Theme choice and through the use of textual adjuncts, and on the interpersonal meta-function, through choices in the system of APPRAISAL, especially through the sub-systems of ATTITUDE and ENGAGEMENT. Results from analysis of a news report and an editorial show that the editorial indeed does make recourse to more overtly present interpersonal devices; this is not to say that the news report disguises the authorial presence entirely, as textual devices, such as conjuncts like however, indicate what a writer’s expectations of his/her readers are.
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