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20210104- Phoenix Workshop- 2000X1050

Online Workshop Replay: Solving Crime Through Linguistics

How good is your detective skill? In this 40-minutes workshop, our Dr Phoenix Lam introduced us to authorship studies - an area of linguistics, and how authorship studies can help to solve crime in authentic settings.

4 Jan, 2021

Others

20201230- Replay 23 Nov Seminar- 2000X1050

Replay: Analysing Professional Discourse from a Multimodal Perspective by Dr William Feng

What are the new semiotic possibilities brought by technologies? This is a replay of the webinar took place on 23 Nov 2020 with our Dr William Feng, Associate Professor of the Department as the speaker. He discussed the functions of multimodal resources in knowledge construction and corporate promotion. Check it out if you have missed it! Abstract: As discourse and communication in various professional contexts have become increasingly multimodal, it is important for analysts to look at semiotic resources beyond language. A multimodal approach is therefore needed for understanding how meaning is realised through the deployment of different semiotic resources. In this talk, I will introduce how theories in multimodality can contribute to the analysis of professional discourse, addressing the question “what happens when professional communication moves online?” in particular. Working broadly with the notion of multimodal genre analysis, I will examine two key features of professional discourse on new media, namely, the complexity of communicative purposes and the extensive use of multimodal resources. Using two cases studies of YouTube teaching videos and corporate social media posts, I will discuss the functions of multimodal resources in knowledge construction and corporate promotion, which contribute to the formation of new digital genres. I conclude that professionals and scholars need to understand the new semiotic possibilities brought about by technologies and how multimodal resources are orchestrated for achieving various purposes in digitalised professional communication. This online seminar was jointly organised by the Department of English and Research Centre for Professional Communication in English, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University.

30 Dec, 2020

Events

20201221- Esterina Nervino - 2000X1050

Congrats to our 2018 PhD graduate Dr Esterina Nervino!

Congrats to our 2018 PhD graduate Dr Esterina Nervino for being re-elected as Chairman of the Retail Committee of The Italian Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong and Macao for another two years! Dr Nervino is an awardee of the Hong Kong PhD Fellowship Scheme and her research interests include luxury and art, luxury and space, luxury and CSR, country of origin effect and language use, retail experience, and intercultural communication. We are grateful to see her contributions to the industry and community she involves in! Click here for more details.

21 Dec, 2020

Others

20201218- Anne video- 2000x1050

Video: Getting to know our faculty member

Our Assistant Professor Dr Anne Schluter happily shared about her working life at PolyU and our Department, “PolyU is the first place where I am really in a department full of colleagues who are supportive.” Dr Schluter has worked at universities in the US and Turkey before and she is fascinated by the multilingual environment of Hong Kong. She teaches discourse analysis and sociolinguistics in our Department. Check out the video to know what facilities at PolyU impressed her!  

18 Dec, 2020

Others

20201217- Louise Blog - 2000X1050

The long road back: Implications of Covid-19 for language and cognition

Recovering from Covid-19 can be a long battle... In this blog of Cambridge University Press, our Prof. Louise Cummings, who is a clinical linguist, explained that new cognitive-linguistic impairment (BrainFog) was reported in people with Long Covid, and their language and cognitive skills have been adversely affected. People who are in recovery from Covid-19 report ‘brain fog’, significant memory loss, and difficulty concentrating. Some also describe having difficulty remembering the names of people and things during conversation. If these impairments become chronic in people with Long Covid, speech-language pathology and neuropsychology investigations will be required. Click here to read it now.

17 Dec, 2020

Research

20201216- Replay 16 Nov Seminar - 2000X1050

Replay: Emancipatory discourses in action: A feminist critical discourse analysis of Ghanaian feminist blogs

The replay of the webinar by our Dr Mark Nartey "Emancipatory discourses in action: A feminist critical discourse analysis of Ghanaian feminist blogs" is available now. Check it out if you have missed it! Abstract: Even though one of the aims of critical discourse analysis is to demonstrate how social inequality, power abuse and discriminatory practices can be resisted, most studies have centered on the deconstruction of oppression and ideologically driven discrimination rather than the (re)construction of resistance. In this talk, I address this gap by examining the blogposts of Ghanaian feminists using Lazar’s (2007, 2014) feminist critical discourse analysis as an analytic framework. Specifically, I discuss three resistance strategies utilized in the blogposts to criticize systematic gendering of privilege and inequality, and to foreground the voice and agency of Ghanaian/African women: (1) critiquing patriarchy, traditional gender norms and gender oppression, (2) resisting gender stereotypes and rewriting demeaning gender narratives, (3) calling out sexist attitudes and applauding women who resist such behavior. I argue that these strategies contribute to a feminist political critique of gendered social practices and relations aimed at effecting social emancipation and transformation. The talk ends by highlighting how the emancipatory discourse promoted by the blogs can be enhanced as part of a continuous striving for social justice for Ghanaian/African women. This online seminar was jointly organised by the Department of English and Research Centre for Professional Communication in English, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University.

16 Dec, 2020

Events

4

Proposing a revised functional classification of pragmatic gestures

Our Dr Renia Lopez’s article "Proposing a revised functional classification of pragmatic gestures" was selected by Lingua of Elsevier as an Editors’ Choice Article! The article proposed a revision of the pragmatic functions of #gestures to simplify their classification by bringing the interactional function under the same umbrella of pragmatic functions. It's free to download until end of Feb 2021: https://bit.ly/36axS6z

8 Dec, 2020

Publication

20201125- ENGLink Summer 2020 - 2000X1050

Latest issue of newsletter published: ENGLink Summer 2020

What kept us busy this summer? The pandemic has brought a lot of impact on us and yet, we managed to move things online such as classes, seminars, meetings etc.

25 Nov, 2020

ENGLink

20201119- CommunicationAroundYouW3 - 2000X1050

Communication Around You - Workshop 3: Smart living with language technology

What roles have applied linguists played to the development of language technologies? How can we learn English vocabulary from videos we watch on YouTube with an app?

19 Nov, 2020

Others

7

Hashtag Activism in Hong Kong

Congrats to our Dr Aditi Bhatia and Dr Andrew Ross at University of Sydney for receiving the grant for this joint research! The project will compare the public narrative among Hongkongers opposing the extradition bill against speeches by HK's Chief Executive to reveal any correlations or contradictions amongst both protestor narrative on social media and governmental counter-narrative, in terms of level of emotion or urgency, as well as use of representational metaphors.

24 Jul, 2020

Research

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