Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > External points of view in the PrEPUK News Corpus

Electronic data

  • External_points_of_view_in_the_PrEPUK_News_Corpus_Accepted_version

    Rights statement: This is an Author’s Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Cardiff University Press in Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies. The Version of Record is available online at: https://jcads.cardiffuniversitypress.org/articles/abstract/10.18573/jcads.53/

    Accepted author manuscript, 307 KB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

External points of view in the PrEPUK News Corpus

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

External points of view in the PrEPUK News Corpus. / Collins, Luke; Jones, Lucy.
In: Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies, Vol. 4, 10.11.2021, p. 108-134.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Collins, L & Jones, L 2021, 'External points of view in the PrEPUK News Corpus', Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies, vol. 4, pp. 108-134. https://doi.org/10.18573/jcads.53

APA

Collins, L., & Jones, L. (2021). External points of view in the PrEPUK News Corpus. Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies, 4, 108-134. https://doi.org/10.18573/jcads.53

Vancouver

Collins L, Jones L. External points of view in the PrEPUK News Corpus. Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies. 2021 Nov 10;4:108-134. doi: 10.18573/jcads.53

Author

Collins, Luke ; Jones, Lucy. / External points of view in the PrEPUK News Corpus. In: Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies. 2021 ; Vol. 4. pp. 108-134.

Bibtex

@article{994cb988a19843e396bdcdc464cedcec,
title = "External points of view in the PrEPUK News Corpus",
abstract = "This work examines the use of reported external points of view (EPVs), with a focus on quotations, in a corpus of U.K. news coverage of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP). Forms of external attribution have been shown to be a prominent feature of news discourse (e.g., Juillan, 2011; Semino and Short, 2004) and this has implications for public understanding of health issues. In the case of PrEP, the polarised views found in news coverage (Jaspal and Nerlich, 2017) have implications for the wider support and uptake of the treatment.We report the findings of a corpus-assisted study of quotation, outlining patterns in the prevalence and distribution of quotes across the corpus according to frequently-cited sources and reporting verbs. Drawing on the Appraisal framework (White, 2012), we then provide a closer analysis of three articles covering the same news event to discuss the broader integration of external points of view and the ways in which journalists indicate their dialogistic association with the views they report.We find that forms of speech presentation in quotations are relatively uniform, with journalists favouring — in particular — forms of the reporting verb say, or declining to use a reporting expression at all. This reflects a broader practice in which dialogistic association with quotations is largely unmarked. We find that journalists rely on the content of quotations for inscribed attitude, yet still invoke attitudes towards EPVs through the labelling of their sources, the reporting verbs they use and through the inclusion and positioning of EPVs in the article.",
keywords = "PrEP, reported speech, news, epistemological positioning, HIV",
author = "Luke Collins and Lucy Jones",
note = "'This is an Author{\textquoteright}s Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Cardiff University Press in Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies. The Version of Record is available online at: https://jcads.cardiffuniversitypress.org/articles/abstract/10.18573/jcads.53/",
year = "2021",
month = nov,
day = "10",
doi = "10.18573/jcads.53",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "108--134",
journal = "Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies",
issn = "2515-0251",
publisher = "Cardiff University",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - External points of view in the PrEPUK News Corpus

AU - Collins, Luke

AU - Jones, Lucy

N1 - 'This is an Author’s Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Cardiff University Press in Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies. The Version of Record is available online at: https://jcads.cardiffuniversitypress.org/articles/abstract/10.18573/jcads.53/

PY - 2021/11/10

Y1 - 2021/11/10

N2 - This work examines the use of reported external points of view (EPVs), with a focus on quotations, in a corpus of U.K. news coverage of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP). Forms of external attribution have been shown to be a prominent feature of news discourse (e.g., Juillan, 2011; Semino and Short, 2004) and this has implications for public understanding of health issues. In the case of PrEP, the polarised views found in news coverage (Jaspal and Nerlich, 2017) have implications for the wider support and uptake of the treatment.We report the findings of a corpus-assisted study of quotation, outlining patterns in the prevalence and distribution of quotes across the corpus according to frequently-cited sources and reporting verbs. Drawing on the Appraisal framework (White, 2012), we then provide a closer analysis of three articles covering the same news event to discuss the broader integration of external points of view and the ways in which journalists indicate their dialogistic association with the views they report.We find that forms of speech presentation in quotations are relatively uniform, with journalists favouring — in particular — forms of the reporting verb say, or declining to use a reporting expression at all. This reflects a broader practice in which dialogistic association with quotations is largely unmarked. We find that journalists rely on the content of quotations for inscribed attitude, yet still invoke attitudes towards EPVs through the labelling of their sources, the reporting verbs they use and through the inclusion and positioning of EPVs in the article.

AB - This work examines the use of reported external points of view (EPVs), with a focus on quotations, in a corpus of U.K. news coverage of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP). Forms of external attribution have been shown to be a prominent feature of news discourse (e.g., Juillan, 2011; Semino and Short, 2004) and this has implications for public understanding of health issues. In the case of PrEP, the polarised views found in news coverage (Jaspal and Nerlich, 2017) have implications for the wider support and uptake of the treatment.We report the findings of a corpus-assisted study of quotation, outlining patterns in the prevalence and distribution of quotes across the corpus according to frequently-cited sources and reporting verbs. Drawing on the Appraisal framework (White, 2012), we then provide a closer analysis of three articles covering the same news event to discuss the broader integration of external points of view and the ways in which journalists indicate their dialogistic association with the views they report.We find that forms of speech presentation in quotations are relatively uniform, with journalists favouring — in particular — forms of the reporting verb say, or declining to use a reporting expression at all. This reflects a broader practice in which dialogistic association with quotations is largely unmarked. We find that journalists rely on the content of quotations for inscribed attitude, yet still invoke attitudes towards EPVs through the labelling of their sources, the reporting verbs they use and through the inclusion and positioning of EPVs in the article.

KW - PrEP

KW - reported speech

KW - news

KW - epistemological positioning

KW - HIV

U2 - 10.18573/jcads.53

DO - 10.18573/jcads.53

M3 - Journal article

VL - 4

SP - 108

EP - 134

JO - Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies

JF - Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies

SN - 2515-0251

ER -