TY - JOUR
T1 - To take a stance
T2 - A developmental study of the use of pronouns and passives in spoken and written narrative and expository texts in Dutch
AU - van Hell, Janet G.
AU - Verhoeven, Ludo
AU - Tak, Marjan
AU - Van Oosterhout, Moniek
N1 - Funding Information:
This research is partly supported by a Spencer Foundation Major Grant for the Study of Developing Literacy. We thank Mieke van Diepen and Monique Bartelings for their help in data collection, and Ruth Berman, Liesbeth van Beijsterveldt, Dorit Ravid, and an anonymous reviewer for insightful comments on an earlier version of this paper.
Copyright:
Copyright 2004 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2005/2
Y1 - 2005/2
N2 - Discourse stance as expressed by the use of pronouns and passive-voice constructions is examined in two different text genres, narrative and expository text, produced in speech and writing by four groups of Dutch speakers: 9-10 year olds, 11-12 year olds, 15-16 year olds, and adults. In the pronoun analyses, the distribution and use of personal, impersonal, indefinite impersonal (pro)nominals, and demonstrative pronouns were examined. These quantitative analyses were supplemented with qualitative, functional analyses of the use of men (like German 'man'), generic je 'you', as well as ik 'I' in expository text. In the passive analyses, the distribution and use of five types of passives were examined: present, past, infinitival, impersonal, and pseudo passives. The qualitative analyses of passives focused on the semantics of the verb, the presence of the agent, and the nature of the patient noun phrase, i.e., its degree of topicalization and animacy. In general, the results showed that children and adults use pronouns and passives systematically to express discourse stance in narrative and expository texts. In specific cases, grade school children use pronoun and passive forms in rhetorically less sophisticated ways, indicating that the expression of discourse stance is part of later language development.
AB - Discourse stance as expressed by the use of pronouns and passive-voice constructions is examined in two different text genres, narrative and expository text, produced in speech and writing by four groups of Dutch speakers: 9-10 year olds, 11-12 year olds, 15-16 year olds, and adults. In the pronoun analyses, the distribution and use of personal, impersonal, indefinite impersonal (pro)nominals, and demonstrative pronouns were examined. These quantitative analyses were supplemented with qualitative, functional analyses of the use of men (like German 'man'), generic je 'you', as well as ik 'I' in expository text. In the passive analyses, the distribution and use of five types of passives were examined: present, past, infinitival, impersonal, and pseudo passives. The qualitative analyses of passives focused on the semantics of the verb, the presence of the agent, and the nature of the patient noun phrase, i.e., its degree of topicalization and animacy. In general, the results showed that children and adults use pronouns and passives systematically to express discourse stance in narrative and expository texts. In specific cases, grade school children use pronoun and passive forms in rhetorically less sophisticated ways, indicating that the expression of discourse stance is part of later language development.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.pragma.2004.08.004
DO - 10.1016/j.pragma.2004.08.004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:9144241938
SN - 0378-2166
VL - 37
SP - 239
EP - 273
JO - Journal of Pragmatics
JF - Journal of Pragmatics
IS - 2
ER -