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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton March 10, 2015

On the mitigating function of modality and evidentiality. Evidence from English and Spanish medical research papers

  • Francisco Alonso-Almeida

    Francisco Alonso-Almeida is Senior Lecturer of English Philology at the University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. His research interests focus on pragmatics, discourse analysis, specialized English discourse and corpus linguistics, also with a historical scope. He has published articles on these topics in international refereed journals, such as Studia Neophilologica, Studia Anglica Posnaniensia, Neuphilologische Mitteilungen, Journal of Historical Pragmatics, Research in Language, and Neophilologus, among others.

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From the journal Intercultural Pragmatics

Abstract

Scientific writing presents a set of rhetorical strategies to effectively express mitigation of claims. Critical analysis includes epistemic modality and evidentiality within these attenuating devices. In my view, the basis for these inclusions lies in a truth-value interpretation of the data. In the present article, my main objective is to show that, while epistemic modality can indeed convey mitigation of a proposition, evidentiality does not behave in a similar way. My intention is also to demonstrate following Cornillie and Delbecque (2008) that the use of evidentiality is to show the authors' construal of information rather than to imply authorial commitment to or indecision regarding the information presented. To this end, I will produce two different analyzes of the same data when coming to the description of evidentials, one that concerns a pragmatic interpretation. The study is conducted on a corpus of English and Spanish medical research articles from which instances of epistemic and evidential devices with a scope over a proposition are excerpted. The use of a contrastive analysis is twofold: first I want to detect preferences for any of these devices in two different languages, and second I also aim to discover whether these devices report a similar behavior in both cultures.

About the author

Francisco Alonso-Almeida

Francisco Alonso-Almeida is Senior Lecturer of English Philology at the University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. His research interests focus on pragmatics, discourse analysis, specialized English discourse and corpus linguistics, also with a historical scope. He has published articles on these topics in international refereed journals, such as Studia Neophilologica, Studia Anglica Posnaniensia, Neuphilologische Mitteilungen, Journal of Historical Pragmatics, Research in Language, and Neophilologus, among others.

Published Online: 2015-3-10
Published in Print: 2015-3-1

©2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Munich/Boston

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