Arousing Readers’ Interest: An Inquiry into Chinese Argumentative Essays

Jason Miin-Hwa Lim, Vui-Lin Chung

Abstract


Arousing readers’ interest constitutes a major component in argumentative essays, but how writers use language resources to capture readers’ interest in the written discourse remains a fascinating area for a qualitative exploration. Based on a genre-based analytical framework, the researchers studied the salient linguistic resources used by professional writers to attract readers’ attention to their argumentative essays. Additional information was elicited from specialist informants to examine the circumstances under which the rhetorical move was used. It was found that writers arouse readers’ interest using five different strategies aimed at highlighting recent unusual situations, underscoring current relevance of alarming situations, reporting attention-grabbing observations, indicating rapid changes in the modern era, and foregrounding the severity of the problems encountered. Apart from identifying writers’ appeals in the five communicative functions, the researchers ascertained how writers vividly depict situations using a range of salient language resources, particularly temporal adverbials signalling noteworthy situations during previous time periods, noun phrases accentuating the significance of specific circumstances, and adjectival modifiers highlighting abundance or prevalence. Aside from illustrating how writers deploy four-character idiomatic expressions indicating deteriorating situations and rapid social transformations, this paper will reveal how writers capture readers’ attention by using adjectival phrases denoting the severity of situations, verb phrases signalling undesirable behaviours, and predicator-object structures denoting annoying habits. Recommendations are given on how instructors can use a broad array of rhetorical strategies and language resources to design exercises aimed at helping learners to aptly attract readers’ attention to their argumentative essays.


Keywords


Genre analysis; language for academic purposes; Chinese language, teaching materials; argumentative essays

Full Text:

PDF

References


Ang, M.C. (2017). Chinese education in Malaysia. Retrieved November 24, 2018, from http://education.oxfordre.com/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190264093.001.0001/acrefore-9780190264093-e-220.

Bhatia, V. J. (1993). Analysing genre: Language use in professional setting. New York: Longman Publishing.

Biber, D., Connor, D., & Upton, T. A. (Eds.). (2007). Discourse on the move: Using corpus analysis to describe discourse structure. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

Feak, C. B., & Swales, J. M. (2011). Creating contexts: Writing introductions across genres. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

Guo J. M. (2013). Theoretical concepts and implementation in the training of high school students for argumentative writing. Liaoning: Liaoning Normal University.

Hashim, A. (2009). Languages in multicultural Malaysia. In Rofli, N., & Khoo, E. (Eds.), Malaysian culture: An introduction (pp. 54–65). Kuala Lumpur: Jabatan

Kebudayaan dan Kesenian Negara.

Hinds, J. (1990). Inductive, deductive, quasi-deductive: Expository writing in Japanese, Korean, Chinese and Thai. In: U. Connor & A. M. Johns (Eds.), Coherence in

writing: Research and pedagogical perspectives, 81–109. Alexandria, VA: Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages.

Hyland, K. (1990). A genre description of the argumentative essay. RELC Journal. 21(1), 66–78. doi:10.1177/003368829002100105.

Joseph, R., & Lim, J.M. (2018). Background information in the Discussion sections of Forestry journals: A case study. GEMA Online Journal of Language Studies.

(1), 198–216.

Joseph, R, & Lim, J. M. H. (2019). Directions for the future: A genre-based investigation into recommendations for further research and practical applications in

Forestry. ESP Today. 7(2), 124–147.

Karlgren, B. (1962). Sound and symbol in Chinese. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.

Lim, J. M. H. (2011). Delineating sampling procedures: Pedagogical significance of analysing sampling descriptions and their justifications in TESL experimental

research reports. Ibérica. 21, 71–92.

Lim, J. M. H. (2017). Writing descriptions of experimental procedures in language education: Implications for the teaching of English for academic purposes. English for

Specific Purposes. 47, 61–80.

Lim, J. M. H. (2019). Explicit and implicit justifications of experimental procedures in language education: Pedagogical implications of studying expert writers’

communicative resources. Journal of English for Academic Purposes. 37, 34–51.

Malaysian Ministry of Education. (2000). Sukatan pelajaran Kurikulum Bersepadu Sekolah Menengah (Syllabus in the Integrated Curriculum for Secondary Schools).

Kuala Lumpur: Centre for Curriculum Development, Ministry of Education.

Malaysian Ministry of Education. (2016). Kompilasi kertas peperiksaan sebenar 2009 – 2015 SPM Bahasa Cina. Kajang: Cepat Cetak.

Miles, M. B., Huberman, A. M., & Saldana, J. (2014). Qualitative data analysis (3rd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.

Noor, R. (2001). Contrastive rhetoric in expository prose: Approaches and achievements. Journal of Pragmatics. 33, 255–269.

O’Hallaron, C. L. (2014). Supporting fifth-grade ELLs’ argumentative writing development. Written Communication. 31, 304–331.

Qin, J., & Karabacak, E. (2010). The analysis of Toulmin elements in Chinese EFL university argumentative writing. System. 38(3), 444–456.

Raman, S. R., & Tan, Y. S. (2015). The development of Chinese education in Malaysia. ISEAS Working Papers. 2, 1–28.

Ross, C., & Ma, S. J. H. (2006). Modern Mandarin Chinese grammar. New York: Routledge.

Soler-Monreal, C. (2015). Announcing one’s work in PhD theses in computer science: A comparison of Move 3 in literature reviews written in English L1, English L2 and

Spanish L1. English for Specific Purposes. 40, 27–41.

Swales, J. M. (2004). Research genres: Exploration and applications. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Swales, J.M., & Feak, C.B. (2004). Academic writing for graduate students: Essential tasks and skills (2nd ed.). Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press.

Toh, L. L., & Chu, H. H. (2016). Using national school students’ Chinese essays as examples: Chinese students’ ability to master higher order thinking skills and its

related challenges. Theory and practice of Chinese language teaching in Malaysia, 1, 179–192.

Toulmin, S. (2003). The uses of argument (Updated ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Wang, H. L. (2014). A preliminary study of argumentative writing strategies in pre-university examinations. Wuhan, Hubei Province: Hunan Changsha.

Wang, X. (2014). Chinese education in Malaysia: Past and present. In X. L. Curdt-Christiansen, & A. Hancock (Eds.), Learning Chinese in diasporic communities: Many

pathways to being Chinese (pp. 139-157). Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company.

Wang, W., & Yang, C. (2015). Claiming centrality as promotion in applied linguistics research article introductions. Journal of English for Academic Purposes. 20, 162–

Wong, V. F., & Lim, J. M. H. (2014). Linking communicative functions with linguistic resources in short stories: Implications of a narrative analysis for second language

writing instruction. System. 45, 147–162.

Yang. N. F. (2012). Toulmin’s model. Chongqing: Chongqing Technological University.

Yip, P.C. & Rimmington, D. (2004). Chinese: A comprehensive grammar. New York: Routledge.

Zhang L. Y. (2012). A study of training strategies in argumentative writing for pre-university examinations. Chongqing: Chongqing Normal University.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17576/gema-2021-2101-12

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


 

 

 

eISSN : 2550-2131

ISSN : 1675-8021