How the medium shapes the message: Stance in two forms of book reviews

Book reviews on academic blog sites are becoming increasingly visible and important as they give scholars a space to evaluate research and reach a wider audience. While reviews are a familiar genre in academic journals, their similarity to this more recent incarnation is unclear. While it appears to...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Pragmatics Vol. 193; pp. 269 - 280
Main Authors: Zou, Hang (Joanna), Hyland, Ken
Format: Book Review Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Amsterdam Elsevier B.V 01-05-2022
Elsevier Science Ltd
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Summary:Book reviews on academic blog sites are becoming increasingly visible and important as they give scholars a space to evaluate research and reach a wider audience. While reviews are a familiar genre in academic journals, their similarity to this more recent incarnation is unclear. While it appears to be the same genre with the same purpose to explicitly evaluate a published text and the contribution of its author, the blog book review operates in a very different interactional context. The question arises, then, whether this is the same genre. Does the channel of communication introduce particular communicative constraints and affordances which make this a different kind of text? Based on 30 book reviews in journals and 30 in a respected academic blog, we explore the similarities and differences in reviewers’ use of stance in these two forms. Findings show that all stance resources were employed by both sets of writers but were more frequent in the blog book reviews. The study thus has important implications for understanding the concept of genre, for analysing rhetorical stance choices, and for novice writers embarking on reviewing in new platforms. •This paper reports variations in reviewers' use of stance in two forms of book reviews: book reviews in journals and in a respected academic blog.•Hyland's stance features are analysed.•Stance resources were more frequent in the blog book reviews.•This study answers the question whether the medium in which a book review is published undermines its integrity as a single genre.
ISSN:0378-2166
1879-1387
DOI:10.1016/j.pragma.2022.03.023