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Monika Bednarek | |
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Born | 1977 (age 46–47) |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Augsburg (PhD, habilitation) |
Thesis | Evaluating the World. The Evaluative Style of British Broadsheet and Tabloid Publications (2005) |
Doctoral advisor |
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Academic work | |
Discipline | Linguist |
Sub-discipline | Corpus linguistics |
Institutions | University of Sydney |
Monika Bednarek (born 1977) is a German-born Australian linguist. She is a professor in linguistics at the University of Sydney [1] and director of the Sydney Corpus Lab. [2] She is one of the co-developers of Discursive News Values Analysis (DNVA),which is a framework for analyzing how events are constructed as newsworthy through language and images. [3] Her work ranges across various linguistic sub-disciplines,including corpus linguistics,media linguistics,sociolinguistics,discourse analysis,stylistics,and applied linguistics. [1]
Bednarek was born and educated in southern Germany. She received her PhD in English Linguistics (summa cum laude) in 2005 from the University of Augsburg under the supervision of Wolfram Bublitz. [4] She received her Habilitation in English linguistics in 2008 from the same university,where she also held her first academic appointment. Since 2009 she has held a continuing position in Linguistics at the University of Sydney. [1]
From 2009 to 2015,Bednarek was book reviews editor of the SAGE journal Discourse and Communication. From 2017 to 2021,she was co-editor,along with Lachlan Mackenzie and Martin Hilpert,of the international journal Functions of Language (John Benjamins). [5]
Much of Bednarek's research makes a contribution to corpus-based discourse analysis or corpus-assisted discourse studies. Key projects include the analysis of TV series (with a focus on dialogue), [6] [7] news discourse (news values analysis,shared news,and health news),the language of evaluation/emotion,and innovation in research methodologies in corpus linguistics.
Bednarek's research on television dialogue has focused on US TV series,with more recent work extending this to Australian series. [8] Contributions include the theorizing of televisual characterization, [9] for example,the concept of 'expressive character identity', [10] a new framework for analysing the functions of dialogue (FATS), [11] and methodological innovation in taking a trinocular view of how language is used in television series,how such language is produced by screenwriters,and how it is consumed in transnational contexts. [12] A new corpus of dialogue from 66 different TV series was compiled for this project. [13] Her work on swear and taboo words in television dialogue has resulted in a novel operationalization and theorization of such words [14] as well as a new taxonomy of relevant linguistic practices. [15]
Early corpus-assisted discourse analysis systematically compared the expression of opinion in British broadsheet and tabloid newspapers. [16] In collaboration with Dr. Helen Caple,Bednarek later created a framework for the discursive analysis of news values,called DNVA. [17] This approach uses corpus and discourse analysis to examine how news values are constructed through semiotic resources (language,image,etc.). [18]
Bednarek has made contributions to the study of language and evaluation/emotion. Her 2006 book,Evaluation in Media Discourse, introduced a parameter-based framework of evaluation,while her 2008 book,Emotion Talk Across Corpora, developed a corpus linguistic approach to the analysis of emotion talk and explored this across British English registers. The book includes a chapter describing a local grammar of affect,evaluated by Susan Hunston as 'probably the most successful' version. [19] She has also contributed to critiquing and developing research on appraisal,especially in relation to attitude and affect.
Corpus linguistics is the study of a language as that language is expressed in its text corpus, its body of "real world" text. Corpus linguistics proposes that a reliable analysis of a language is more feasible with corpora collected in the field—the natural context ("realia") of that language—with minimal experimental interference. The large collections of text allow linguistics to run quantitative analyses on linguistic concepts, otherwise harder to quantify.
Stylistics, a branch of applied linguistics, is the study and interpretation of texts of all types and/or spoken language in regard to their linguistic and tonal style, where style is the particular variety of language used by different individuals and/or in different situations or settings. For example, the vernacular, or everyday language may be used among casual friends, whereas more formal language, with respect to grammar, pronunciation or accent, and lexicon or choice of words, is often used in a cover letter and résumé and while speaking during a job interview.
News values are "criteria that influence the selection and presentation of events as published news." These values help explain what makes something "newsworthy."
Discourse analysis (DA), or discourse studies, is an approach to the analysis of written, vocal, or sign language use, or any significant semiotic event.
Semantic prosody, also discourse prosody, describes the way in which certain seemingly neutral words can be perceived with positive or negative associations through frequent occurrences with particular collocations. Coined in analogy to linguistic prosody, popularised by Bill Louw.
John McHardy Sinclair was a Professor of Modern English Language at Birmingham University from 1965 to 2000. He pioneered work in corpus linguistics, discourse analysis, lexicography, and language teaching.
Corpus-assisted discourse studies is related historically and methodologically to the discipline of corpus linguistics. The principal endeavor of corpus-assisted discourse studies is the investigation, and comparison of features of particular discourse types, integrating into the analysis the techniques and tools developed within corpus linguistics. These include the compilation of specialised corpora and analyses of word and word-cluster frequency lists, comparative keyword lists and, above all, concordances.
Linguistics is the scientific study of language. Linguistics is based on a theoretical as well as a descriptive study of language and is also interlinked with the applied fields of language studies and language learning, which entails the study of specific languages. Before the 20th century, linguistics evolved in conjunction with literary study and did not exclusively employ scientific methods.
James Robert Martin is a Canadian linguist. He is Professor of Linguistics at The University of Sydney. He is the leading figure in the 'Sydney School' of systemic functional linguistics. Martin is well known for his work on discourse analysis, genre, appraisal, multimodality and educational linguistics.
Christian Matthias Ingemar Martin Matthiessen is a Swedish-born linguist and a leading figure in the systemic functional linguistics (SFL) school, having authored or co-authored more than 100 books, refereed journal articles, and papers in refereed conference proceedings, with contributions to three television programs. One of his major works is Lexicogrammatical cartography (1995), a 700-page study of the grammatical systems of English from the perspective of SFL. He has co-authored a number of books with Michael Halliday. Since 2008 he has been a professor in the Department of English at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Before this, he was Chair of the Department of Linguistics at Macquarie University in Sydney.
Media linguistics is the linguistic study of language use in the media. The fundamental aspect of media linguistics as a new systematic approach to the study of media language is that media text is one of the most common forms of language existence today. It studies the functioning of language in the media sphere, or modern mass communication presented by print, audiovisual, digital, and networked media. Media linguistics investigates the relationship between language use, which is regarded as an interface between social and cognitive communication practice, and public discourse conveyed through media.
In Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL), appraisal refers to the ways that writers or speakers express approval or disapproval for things, people, behaviour or ideas. Language users build relationships with their interlocutors by expressing such positions. In other approaches in linguistics, alternative terms such as evaluation or stance are preferred.
Julia Hirschberg is an American computer scientist noted for her research on computational linguistics and natural language processing.
Elena Semino is an Italian-born British linguist whose research involves stylistics and metaphor theory. Focusing on figurative language in a range of poetic and prose works, most recently she has worked on topics from the domains of medical humanities and health communication. Her projects use corpus linguistic methods as well as qualitative analysis.
Paul Baker is a British professor and linguist at the Department of Linguistics and English Language of Lancaster University, United Kingdom. His research focuses on corpus linguistics, critical discourse analysis, corpus-assisted discourse studies and language and identity. He is known for his research on the language of Polari. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and a Fellow of the Royal Society for Arts.
Alice Marie-Claude Caffarel-Cayron is a French-Australian linguist. She is an Honorary Senior Lecturer in Linguistics at the University of Sydney. Caffarel is recognized for the development of a Systemic Functional Grammar of French which has been applied in the teaching of the French language, Discourse analysis and Stylistics at the University of Sydney. Caffarel is recognised as an expert in the field of French Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL).
Michele Zappavigna is an Australian linguist. She is an associate professor at the University of New South Wales, Sydney. Her major contributions are based on the discourse of social media and ambient affiliation. Her work is interdisciplinary and covers studies in systemic functional linguistics (SFL), corpus linguistics, multimodality, social media, online discourse and social semiotics. Zappavigna is the author of six books and numerous journal articles covering these disciplines.
Culinary linguistics, a sub-branch of applied linguistics, is the study of food and language across various interdisciplinary fields such as linguistic, anthropology, sociolinguistics, and consumption politics and globalisation.
Beatrix Busse is Professor of English Linguistics and the Vice-Rector for Student Affairs and Teaching at the University of Cologne. From 2011 to 2019 she held the Chair of English Linguistics at Heidelberg University where she was appointed as Vice-Rector for Teaching and Student Affairs twice, from 2013 to 2019.
Paul Anthony Chilton is a British cognitive linguist and discourse analyst known for his work on conceptual metaphor, cognitive stylistics, and political discourse. Chilton developed a three-dimensional model to analyze semantic structure in natural languages, basd on spatial cognition and using a formalism derived from vector geometry. This approach has been applied to discourse in terms of spatial, temporal, and modal dimensions.