: Anastasiya Kornetzki
: Contrastive Analysis of News Text Types in Russian, British and American Business Online and Print Media
: Frank& Timme
: 9783865969651
: Forum für Fachsprachen-Forschung
: 1
: CHF 53.20
:
: Allgemeine und Vergleichende Sprachwissenschaft
: English
: 373
: Wasserzeichen
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF
This book is devoted to the analysis of cross-media and cross-cultural peculiarities of Russian, British and American media discourse from the intertextual perspective. The study of a complex variety of intertextual links which exist between texts and genres is a contemporary aspect in the theory of intertextuality. There are numerous theoretical approaches in the study of intertextuality, but there is a lack of an empirically profound framework for its analysis across many disciplines. An interdisciplinary approach to the study of intertextuality is a necessary step to investigate this phenomenon comprehensively. This book offers an alternative approach to the study of intertextuality, singling out intra-textual, textual and inter-genre levels on which this phenomenon comes to the fore.

Anastasiya Kornetzki, born in Jasinovataya (Ukraine), did her Master's degree in English studies at the Ruhr-University Bochum. During her doctorate at the Leipzig University she did an extensive research in the field of linguistics, exploring the manifold nature of intertextuality.
Abstract6
Contents7
List of Figures12
1 Introduction18
2 Media Discourse and Intertextuality34
3 Interdisciplinary Theoretical Framework59
4 Alternative Perspective on the Study of Intertextuality93
5 Intra-textual Level of Intertextuality within Multiple Contexts of Research114
6 Textual Level of Intertextuality within MultipleContexts of Research128
7 Inter-genre Level of Intertextuality within Multiple Contexts of Research160
8 Empirical Analysis of Intertextuality on the Intratextual Level181
9 Empirical Analysis of Intertextuality on the Textual Level224
10 Empirical Analysis of Intertextuality on the Intergenre Level295
11 Concluding Remarks321
References337