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7 The multilayeredness of hybridity in the written stylistic analysis argument

  • Anne Isaac
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© 2016 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

© 2016 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Acknowledgements vii
  4. List of Figures ix
  5. List of Tables xi
  6. 1 Preliminaries: Hybridity and Systemic Functional Linguistics 1
  7. Part I Grammatical Hybridity
  8. 2 On the (non)necessity of the hybrid category behavioural process 19
  9. 3 Hybridity in transitivity: Phraseological and metaphorically derived Processes in the system network for transitivity 41
  10. 4 Hybridity and process types 64
  11. Part II Hybridity: Implications for pedagogy and professional practices
  12. 5 Re-orienting semantic dispositions: The role of hybrid forms of language use in university learning 83
  13. 6 Teaching through English: Maximal Input in Meaning Making 109
  14. 7 The multilayeredness of hybridity in the written stylistic analysis argument 133
  15. 8 Activity types, discourse types and role types: interactional hybridity in professional-client encounters 154
  16. Part III Registerial and generic hybridity
  17. 9 Hybridisation: How language users graft new discourses on old root stock 179
  18. 10 Registerial hybridity: Indeterminacy among fields of activity 205
  19. 11 Woolf’s lecture/novel/essay A Room of One’s Own 240
  20. 12 Genre and register hybridisation in an historical text 268
  21. 13 Hybrid contexts and lexicogrammatical choices: Interpersonal uses of language in peer review reports in linguistics and mathematics 286
  22. 14 The permeable context of institutional and newspaper discourse: A corpus-based functional case study of the European sovereign debt crisis 306
  23. Part IV A closing statement: Hybridity – or permeability?
  24. 15 In the nature of language: Reflections on permeability and hybridity 335
  25. Index 384
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