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This edited book showcases original research in the study of
healthcare and health communication, while also providing a
detailed overview of contemporary methods of discourse analysis.
Discourse approaches remain under-represented in the field of
health communication, despite their potential for affording
detailed understanding of health-related text and talk across an
array of contexts, for example in face-to-face and digital
healthcare encounters, health promotion, and patients' accounts of
illness experiences. This book aims to address this gap in the
literature by offering the first book-length treatment of different
approaches to discourse analysis in health(care) and illness
contexts, and it will appeal both to linguists and to researchers
in nursing and health sciences, sociology and anthropology.
Corpus Linguistics for Health Communication provides an accessible
and practical introduction to the use of corpus linguistic methods
to analyse health-related language use across various contexts and
genres. Offering a critical review of the field, discussion of
extended case studies, and practical exercises based on spoken,
written and digital language data, this book: ● introduces the
fields of health communication and corpus linguistics, and
critically reviews cutting-edge studies in the burgeoning area of
corpus-based health communication; ● describes the processes
involved in planning a corpus linguistic study of health
communication, including designing and building a corpus, selecting
tools, and implementing techniques of analysis; ● demonstrates
how corpus linguistic methods can - and have - been applied to the
study of spoken, written and digital health communication, offering
critical reflections and suggesting areas for future development.
Corpus Linguistics for Health Communication is essential reading
for those working at the interface of corpus linguistics and health
communication. Both those with a little or a lot of experience in
either field will find value in its pages.
Corpus Linguistics for Health Communication provides an accessible
and practical introduction to the use of corpus linguistic methods
to analyse health-related language use across various contexts and
genres. Offering a critical review of the field, discussion of
extended case studies, and practical exercises based on spoken,
written and digital language data, this book: ● introduces the
fields of health communication and corpus linguistics, and
critically reviews cutting-edge studies in the burgeoning area of
corpus-based health communication; ● describes the processes
involved in planning a corpus linguistic study of health
communication, including designing and building a corpus, selecting
tools, and implementing techniques of analysis; ● demonstrates
how corpus linguistic methods can - and have - been applied to the
study of spoken, written and digital health communication, offering
critical reflections and suggesting areas for future development.
Corpus Linguistics for Health Communication is essential reading
for those working at the interface of corpus linguistics and health
communication. Both those with a little or a lot of experience in
either field will find value in its pages.
With an estimated 1.6 million English as an Additional Language
(EAL) learners in the UK, and over 5 million in the USA, EAL
research is urgently needed to inform practice. This edited volume
investigates the multifaceted elements that shape EAL pedagogy and
research in a variety of settings and research areas including
linguistic ability influences on subject-specific skills,
integrating learners' home languages into classroom environments,
and the importance of supporting EAL teachers in the classroom. In
doing so, the contributors provide an international perspective on
the emerging field of EAL research. The research-based chapters
detail fundamental concerns related to EAL learner education. The
text is composed of three parts: Part 1 explores the question of
what is EAL and how a definition can shape policy construction;
Part 2 examines the challenges EAL learners face in the classroom,
including the use of first languages and the relative impact
learner language proficiency has on subject-specific classes; and
Part 3 investigates concerns relating to supporting EAL teachers in
the classroom. The volume draws on researcher expertise from a
variety of universities and institutions worldwide. It explores
diverse language backgrounds in multilingual contexts. It covers
empirical studies with pedagogical, policy and further research
implications. The volume represents a single resource invaluable
for EAL teachers, trainers and trainees, as well as researchers in
the field of education, language learning and teaching,
bilingualism and multilingualism, and second language acquisition.
The Language of Patient Feedback provides a unique insight into a
diverse range of issues related to healthcare. Through the
comprehensive and detailed interrogation of 29 million words of
online patient feedback on the NHS in England, as well as 11
million words of responses to the feedback from NHS providers, this
book: Uses a combination of computer-assisted and human analysis
(Corpus-Assisted Discourse Analysis) to examine the extent to which
characteristics like age and gender result in different types of
evaluation. Investigates why nurses, doctors, dentists and
receptionists are associated with very distinct types of feedback.
Demonstrates the ways that NHS staff respond to comments and what
this reveals about underlying institutional ideologies and
practices. Concludes with suggestions for key recommendations that
the NHS could act upon to improve the overall level of care it
provides, as well as reflecting on what patient evaluation can
actually tell us. The Language of Patient Feedback is key reading
for anyone undertaking research within corpus linguistics,
discourse analysis and health communication.
The Language of Patient Feedback provides a unique insight into a
diverse range of issues related to healthcare. Through the
comprehensive and detailed interrogation of 29 million words of
online patient feedback on the NHS in England, as well as 11
million words of responses to the feedback from NHS providers, this
book: Uses a combination of computer-assisted and human analysis
(Corpus-Assisted Discourse Analysis) to examine the extent to which
characteristics like age and gender result in different types of
evaluation. Investigates why nurses, doctors, dentists and
receptionists are associated with very distinct types of feedback.
Demonstrates the ways that NHS staff respond to comments and what
this reveals about underlying institutional ideologies and
practices. Concludes with suggestions for key recommendations that
the NHS could act upon to improve the overall level of care it
provides, as well as reflecting on what patient evaluation can
actually tell us. The Language of Patient Feedback is key reading
for anyone undertaking research within corpus linguistics,
discourse analysis and health communication.
Obesity is a pressing social issue and a persistently newsworthy
topic for the media. This book examines the linguistic
representation of obesity in the British press. It combines
techniques from corpus linguistics with critical discourse studies
to analyse a large corpus of newspaper articles (36 million words)
representing ten years of obesity coverage. These articles are
studied from a range of methodological perspectives, and analytical
themes include variation between newspapers, change over time, diet
and exercise, gender and social class. The volume also investigates
the language that readers use when responding to obesity
representations in the context of online comments. The authors
reveal the power of linguistic choices to shame and stigmatise
people with obesity, presenting them as irresponsible and morally
deviant. Yet the analysis also demonstrates the potential for
alternative representations which place greater focus on the role
that social and political forces play in this topical health issue.
This edited book showcases original research in the study of
healthcare and health communication, while also providing a
detailed overview of contemporary methods of discourse analysis.
Discourse approaches remain under-represented in the field of
health communication, despite their potential for affording
detailed understanding of health-related text and talk across an
array of contexts, for example in face-to-face and digital
healthcare encounters, health promotion, and patients' accounts of
illness experiences. This book aims to address this gap in the
literature by offering the first book-length treatment of different
approaches to discourse analysis in health(care) and illness
contexts, and it will appeal both to linguists and to researchers
in nursing and health sciences, sociology and anthropology.
The fundamental question of how cells grow and divide has perplexed
biologists since the development of the cell theory in the mid-19th
century, when it was recognized by Virchow and others that "all
cells come from cells." In recent years, considerable effort has
been applied to the identification of the basic molecules and
mechanisms that regulate the cell cycle in a number of different
organisms. Such studies have led to the elucidation of the central
paradigms that underpin eukaryotic cell cycle control, for which
Lee Hartwell, Tim Hunt, and Paul Nurse were jointly awarded the
Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology in 2001 in recognition of
their seminal contributions to this field. The importance of
understanding the fundamental mechanisms that modulate cell
division has been reiterated by relatively recent discoveries of
links between cell cycle control and DNA repair, growth, cellular
metabolism, development, and cell death. This new phase of
integrated cell cycle research provides further challenges and
opportunities to the biological and medical worlds in applying
these basic concepts to understanding the etiology of cancer and
other proliferative diseases.
**Shortlisted for the 2021 BAAL Book Prize for an outstanding book
in the field of Applied Linguistics** Situated at the interface of
corpus linguistics and health communication, Corpus, Discourse and
Mental Health provides insights into the linguistic practices of
members of three online support communities as they describe their
experiences of living with and managing different mental health
problems, including anorexia nervosa, depression and diabulimia. In
examining contemporary health communication data, the book combines
quantitative corpus linguistic methods with qualitative discourse
analysis that draws upon recent theoretical insights from critical
health sociology. Using this mixed-methods approach, the analysis
identifies patterns and consistencies in the language used by
people experiencing psychological distress and their role in
realising varying representations of mental illness, diagnosis and
treatment. Far from being neutral accounts of suffering and
treating illness, corpus analysis illustrates that these
interactions are suffused with moral and ideological tensions
sufferers seek to collectively negotiate responsibility for the
onset and treatment of recalcitrant mental health problems.
Integrating corpus linguistics, critical discourse analysis and
health sociology, this book showcases the capacity of linguistic
analysis for understanding mental health discourse as well as
critically exploring the potential of corpus linguistics to offer
an evidence-based approach to health communication research.
The fundamental question of how cells grow and divide has perplexed
biologists since the development of the cell theory in the mid-19th
century, when it was recognized by Virchow and others that "all
cells come from cells." In recent years, considerable effort has
been applied to the identification of the basic molecules and
mechanisms that regulate the cell cycle in a number of different
organisms. Such studies have led to the elucidation of the central
paradigms that underpin eukaryotic cell cycle control, for which
Lee Hartwell, Tim Hunt, and Paul Nurse were jointly awarded the
Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology in 2001 in recognition of
their seminal contributions to this field. The importance of
understanding the fundamental mechanisms that modulate cell
division has been reiterated by relatively recent discoveries of
links between cell cycle control and DNA repair, growth, cellular
metabolism, development, and cell death. This new phase of
integrated cell cycle research provides further challenges and
opportunities to the biological and medical worlds in applying
these basic concepts to understanding the etiology of cancer and
other proliferative diseases.
This Element explores approaches to locating and examining social
identity in corpora with and without the aid of demographic
metadata. This is a key concern in corpus-aided studies of language
and identity, and this Element sets out to explore the main
challenges and affordances associated with either approach and to
discern what either approach can (and cannot) show. It describes
two case studies which each compare two approaches to social
identity variables - sex and age - in a corpus of 14-million words
of patient comments about NHS cancer services in England. The first
approach utilises demographic tags to group comments according to
patients' sex/age while the second involves categorising cases
where patients disclose their sex/age in their comments. This
Element compares the findings from either approach, with the
approaches themselves being critically discussed in terms of their
implications for corpus-aided studies of language and identity.
This book brings together a collection of case studies that explore
the relationship between health and masculinity. It covers various
topics related to health, such as mental health, sexual health,
eating disorders and coronavirus, and offers health-based
perspectives on issues such as migration and gender identity, as
these relate to masculinities. In exploring these themes, this book
addresses a wide range of communicative contexts, including online
forums, interviews, advertising, sex education materials, migrant
integration classes, and suicide notes. This book will appeal to
linguists interested in health and gender (particularly
masculinities), as well as scholars in fields such as psychology,
media studies, cultural studies, and other humanities and social
science disciplines with a focus on discourse.
Obesity is a pressing social issue and a persistently newsworthy
topic for the media. This book examines the linguistic
representation of obesity in the British press. It combines
techniques from corpus linguistics with critical discourse studies
to analyse a large corpus of newspaper articles (36 million words)
representing ten years of obesity coverage. These articles are
studied from a range of methodological perspectives, and analytical
themes include variation between newspapers, change over time, diet
and exercise, gender and social class. The volume also investigates
the language that readers use when responding to obesity
representations in the context of online comments. The authors
reveal the power of linguistic choices to shame and stigmatise
people with obesity, presenting them as irresponsible and morally
deviant. Yet the analysis also demonstrates the potential for
alternative representations which place greater focus on the role
that social and political forces play in this topical health issue.
**Shortlisted for the 2021 BAAL Book Prize for an outstanding book
in the field of Applied Linguistics** Situated at the interface of
corpus linguistics and health communication, Corpus, Discourse and
Mental Health provides insights into the linguistic practices of
members of three online support communities as they describe their
experiences of living with and managing different mental health
problems, including anorexia nervosa, depression and diabulimia. In
examining contemporary health communication data, the book combines
quantitative corpus linguistic methods with qualitative discourse
analysis that draws upon recent theoretical insights from critical
health sociology. Using this mixed-methods approach, the analysis
identifies patterns and consistencies in the language used by
people experiencing psychological distress and their role in
realising varying representations of mental illness, diagnosis and
treatment. Far from being neutral accounts of suffering and
treating illness, corpus analysis illustrates that these
interactions are suffused with moral and ideological tensions
sufferers seek to collectively negotiate responsibility for the
onset and treatment of recalcitrant mental health problems.
Integrating corpus linguistics, critical discourse analysis and
health sociology, this book showcases the capacity of linguistic
analysis for understanding mental health discourse as well as
critically exploring the potential of corpus linguistics to offer
an evidence-based approach to health communication research.
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