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Thèse Année : 2002

Accounting for fieldwork in three areas of geology: A situated analysis of textual silence and salience

Résumé

While researchers have long pointed to the "incomplete information" accompanying various parts of the research article (Latour & Woolgar 1979, Gilbert & Mulkay 1984, Lynch 1985, Berkenkotter & Huckin 1995), silences surrounding the research account have been gaining the explicit attention of discourse analysts only recently (Huckin 1997, 2002, Dressen 1998, Swales 1998, 1999). Recent work has shown that textual silence abounds in academic disciplines such as geology, where most details from the fieldwork mission seem to disappear from the published account (Dressen & Swales 2000, Dressen 2002). Indeed, a number of diachronic studies have demonstrated an increase in authorial discretion in the research ac-count over the past 150-200 years (Bazerman 1988, Salager-Meyer 2000), and in this, geol-ogy is no exception. In order to identify and explain textual silence in modern geological field reporting, this study undertakes a situated genre analysis of a corpus of 103 recent articles (1995-1999) from three subdisciplines in geology. As a socio-historical analysis, it establishes the place the practice of fieldwork has come to occupy in the geological research community over time. A linguistic analysis of the corpus then identifies a specific Field Account part-genre in the geology research article, and further reveals the linguistic and rhetorical strategies by which authors may discreetly give details of their fieldwork and work to establish their credi-bility and field competence (Rudwick 1985). Which field details are considered communally relevant is next determined through the analysis of the various "recontextualizations" (Linell 1998) of one field study, through the convention-driven distillation of the study's field re-sults. The appropriateness and relevancy of field details is further established through a series of text-based interviews with three expert geologists. Here, using Bourdieu (1984) and Engeström (1987), we see how the researcher-writer maneuvers between "the said" and "the unsaid" in each text instantiation, taken as a site of need-based and innovational interaction between individual actors, the collectivity, and the institution. Finally, a discussion of the implications for training junior geologists in research writing closes the study.
Ce projet doctoral élabore une méthodologie qui tente de dévoiler ce que dit le rédacteur de l'article scientifique en géologie à propos de son travail de terrain, mais sans le dire explicitement : le " silence textuel ". La méthode consiste en l'analyse linguistique du " texte " (un corpus de 106 comptes rendus de terrain) par opposition au " contexte ", afin d'en faire émerger le sens caché et le non-dit. Le contexte est analysé de manière qualitative: (1) une étude socio-historique (1700-1995) de l'importance du terrain dans la culture géologique, et spécifiquement en France à partir de 1900 ; (2) une étude ethnométhodologique des pratiques et des valeurs d'un groupe de géologues de terrain francophones ; et (3) l'analyse d'une série de recontextualisations d'un travail de terrain, qui se transforme progressivement en publication. Cette transformation montre l'influence de la communauté scientifique sur la façon dont l'écrit produit sur le terrain se conforme progressivement aux conventions écrites de la communauté scientifique.

Domaines

Linguistique
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Dates et versions

tel-01011742 , version 1 (24-06-2014)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : tel-01011742 , version 1

Citer

Dacia Dressen-Hammouda. Accounting for fieldwork in three areas of geology: A situated analysis of textual silence and salience. Linguistics. University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, 2002. English. ⟨NNT : ⟩. ⟨tel-01011742⟩
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