Top Banner
TOURISM AS TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE DISCOURSE
41

TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

Mar 30, 2015

Download

Documents

Ellis Staley
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

TOURISM AS TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED SPECIALIZED DISCOURSEDISCOURSE

TOURISM AS TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED SPECIALIZED DISCOURSEDISCOURSE

Page 2: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

TOURISM• HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE

INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE

• PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS THE COMPLEXITY OF THIS FIELD, WHICH IS DEFINITELY HYBRID (geography,economics, sociology and psychology are among the disciplines which influence tourism)

Page 3: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

LANGUAGE AND TOURISM

• TOURISM USES LANGUAGE TO MANIPULATE REALITY TURNING AN ANONIMOUS PLACE INTO A TOURIST DESTINATION

• LANGUAGE IS THE MOST POWERFUL DRIVING FORCE IN THE FIELD OF TOURISM. ITS AIM IS “to persuade, lure, woo and seduce millions of human beings, and, in so doing, convert them from potential into actual clients” (Dann, 1996: 2)

Page 4: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

AS A CONSEQUENCE,• THE NEED FOR LANGUAGE EXPERTS IN

THIS FIELD IS GROWING STEADILY(the writing of effective promotional materials requires a high level of language competence and is vital to achieve success in a field characterized by keen competition)

Page 5: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

LANGUAGE AND TOURISM

• THE LANGUAGE OF TOURISM ORGANIZES ITS DISCOURSE ACCORDING TO SPECIFIC LEXICAL, SYNTACTIC AND TEXTUAL CHOICES

• HOWEVER, IS THIS ENOUGH TO LABEL IT AS “SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE”?

Page 6: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• M.V. Calvi (2005: 33) defines the language of tourism as “un linguaggio dalla fisionomia sfuggente” which does not have a well-defined content and clear functional boundaries as it is influenced by a vast range of disciplines like history, geography, art, etc. and encompasses different communicative functions (informative, persuasive, argumentative).

Page 7: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• ALTHOUGH THE FIELD OF TOURISM IS GREATLY INFLUENCED BY OTHER DISCIPLINES, ITS LANGUAGE SHOWS PECULIAR LEXICAL, SYNTACTIC AND TEXTUAL FEATURES WHICH JUSTIFY ITS INCLUSION AMONG THE MANY LSPs

Page 8: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SOME KEY TERMSDISCOURSE

• A complex term used in linguistics and in the social sciencies

• Discourse analysis indicates the study of whole units of communicative exchanges produced in a particular speech community

• Language is analysed both in its form and in its function

Page 9: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SOME KEY TERMS

GENRE• We use this term to refer to a set

ot text types defined according to extralinguistic criteria, e.g. the communicative function they serve in a given discourse community

Page 10: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SOME KEY TERMS

TEXT TYPE• The classification criterion used is

mainly linguistic• Texts are grouped together

according to the linguistic features they share

Page 11: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

TOURIST TEXT TYPES• A FIRST BROAD CLASSIFICATION IS

BETWEEN– A) SPECIALIZED TEXTS ADDRESSED TO

EXPERTS IN THE TOURIST FIELD (e.g. papers on the marketing of tourism, on the sociology and psychology of tourism, on the language peculiarities of tourist texts)

– B) PROMOTIONAL TEXTS ADDRESSED TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC (i.e. to potential tourists)

Page 12: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

• AMONG THE TEXT TYPES AIMED AT NON-SPECIALISTS, NIGRO (2006) IDENTIFIES THE FOLLOWING 4 TYPOLOGIES

• 1) LEAFLETS• 2) BROCHURES• 3) TRAVELOGUES• 4) TRAVEL GUIDES

Page 13: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

• HOWEVER, THE RANGE OF TEXT TYPES IS WIDER (consider tourist adverts, itineraries, unsolicited promotional letters, etc.)

• DANN (1996) CLASSIFIES TOURIST TEXT TYPES ACCORDING TO THE MEDIUM (AUDIO, VISUAL, WRITTEN, SESORY) AND TO THEIR STAGE IN THE TOURIST CYCLE (PRE/ ON,/POST TRIP)

Page 14: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

• TOURIST TEXT TYPES (AS TOURISM ITSELF) ARE HYBRID GENRES“Different text types often share a number of linguistic and discoursive strategies, giving birth to hybrid texts which can hardly be classified as belonging to a particular genre.” (Nigro, 2006:64)

Page 15: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

DANN’S CLASSIFICATION OF TOURIST TEXT TYPES

PRE-TRIP: ADVERTS, LEAFLETS, BROCHURES

ON-TRIP: TRAVEL GUIDES, TRAVELOGUES

POST-TRIP: TRIP REPORTS, REVIEWS

Page 16: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

LEAFLETS• IT IS USUALLY A SINGLE SHEET OR A FOLDED PIECE OF

PAPER• ALTHOUGH PRACTICAL INFORMATION IS SOMETIMES

PROVIDED, THE MAIN COMMUNICATIVE PURPOSE IS TO PERSUADE POTENTIAL TOURISTS TO VISIT A PLACE OR FACILITY

• THE MESSAGE IS USUALLY SHORT AND CLEAR• THE AESTETIC COMPONENT IS PARTICULARLY

IMPORTANT (prevalence of pictures)

Page 17: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

BROCHURES• HAVE TWO MAIN COMMUNICATIVE

FUNCTIONS:– 1) to provide practical information which

visitors may use in their trip decision making and planning processes (informative)

– 2) to establish an image of the destination as a viable alternative when planning future trips (persuasive)(Fesermaier, 2000 in Nigro 2006)

Page 18: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

BROCHURES• According to Mason (2004) brochures

display an almost fixed set of “moves”:– A) evaluative claims about the place/facility

to visit– B) brief history of the resort/facility– C) guided tour of the main attractions– D) practical details (e.g. how to get there)– E) regulations (e.g. restrictions concerning

animals, food, photography, etc)

Page 19: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

BROCHURES• EACH MOVE HAS ITS OWN COMMUNICATIVE

FUNCTION WHICH IS BEST SERVED BY A SET OF LANGUAGE FEATURES

• TO EACH SHIFT OF MOVE CORRESPONDS A CHANGE IN THE PREVAILING LANGUAGE FEATURESe.g. evaluative claim: present tense, use of superlative forms, thematization of adverbials of place; brief history: past tense, thematization of adverbials of time; guided tour: use of imperative forms, increase in the use of personal pronouns

Page 20: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

TRAVELOGUES• CAN BE ARTICLES WRITTEN BY

(SPONSORED) JOURNALISTS AND PUBLISHED IN THE TRAVEL SECTIONS OF NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES

• CAN BE TRIP REPORTS WRITTEN BY INDEPENDENT TOURISTS AND POSTED ON TRAVELOGUE SITES IN THE INTERNET (e.g. www.travelhog.net)

Page 21: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

TRAVELOGUES• THE PREVAILING FUNCTION IS NARRATIVE

(they sometimes include negative comments on the places visited or on the facilities used; they often offer advice on how to best do things)

• TEXT IS USUALLY PREVALENT (and can be quite long) BUT THE ICONIC COMPONENT IS ALSO PRESENT

• THEY ARE OFTEN ORGANIZED INTO SECTIONS (like travel guides)

Page 22: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

LEXICAL ASPECTS• Lexis is the most visible feature of

specialized discourse.• It is mainly through lexis that a

particular specialized language can be set apart both from general language and from other specialized languages.

• General language is the “mortar” used to mix specialized lexis (Cortelazzo,1994)

Page 23: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

LEXICAL ASPECTS• Hoffman (1998) proposes a breakdown

of specialized lexis into three categories:– specific vocabulary (i.e. highly specialized

terms) e.g. late-perpendicular architecture– common specific vocabulary (i.e. common

words which have been subjected to semantic restriction) e.g. package tour

– general vocabulary (i.e. common words which have not been subjected to semantic restriction) e.g. hotel

Page 24: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

LEXICAL ASPECTS• Contrary to other fields, the language of

tourism is not shared by a restricted group of specialists

• Its promotional and persuasive function makes it an accessible register (most of the time)

• However, all lexical choices are carefully made (use of selected keywords as away, adventure, dream, imagination, pleasure, escape to comply with the tourist’s expectations about holidaying)

Page 25: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

LEXICAL ASPECTS• A further peculiar characteristic is the use of a

technique called languaging (Potter in Dann (1996: 183), i.e. the use of foreign and invented words in tourist texts to induce a sense of inferiority in the touristsome examples:– If you are lucky, you may also see the world famous

Sri Sri Radha Londonisvara (from: The London Discount Guide – leaflet)

– Camden Town is the London smorgasboard par excellence (from: he Original London Walks – leaflet)

Page 26: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

LEXICAL ASPECTS• Another commonly employed technique

is the use of “key words” referring to one of the following psychological themes:

• ROMANTICISM, REGRESSION, REBIRTH• HAPPINESS, HEDONISM, HELIOCENTRISM• FUN, FANTASY, FAIRY TALES• SEA, SEX, SUN, SOCIALIZATION

Page 27: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

LEXICAL ASPECTS• In the field of tourism the vast majority

of specific vocabulary (in Hoffmann’s sense) is ascribable to the many disciplines which characterize it (history, geography, art, etc)An example:The Henry VII Chapel, in the easternmost part of the abbey, is an outstanding example of late perpendicular architecture, with spectacular circular vaulting on the ceiling. The wooden choir stalls are carved with exotic creatures and adorned with colourful

heraldic flags. (From: Lonely Planet London, 2004: 126)

Page 28: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SOME COMMON WORD FORMATION TECHNIQUES

• Specialization of words borrowed from everyday language (e.g. package > package tour) or from other specialized languages (e.g. congestion < from medicine > air traffic congestion)

• Creation of acronyms (e.g. B&B = bed and breakfast; LTB = London tourist board; LHR = London Heathrow airport)

• Creation of compounds (e.g. half-board; holiday farmhouse; theme park; one way ticket)

Page 29: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC ASPECTS THE SPECIFICITY OF

MORPHOSYNTACTIC FEATURES IN SPECIALIZED LANGUAGES IS NOT

A QUALITATIVE BUT A QUANTITATIVE MATTER

Page 30: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• NOMINALIZATION: from a verb phrase to a nominal phrase– E.g. when you arrive at the hotel > upon

arrival at the hotel

• USE OF PASSIVE FORMS– E.g. the tour guide will show you all the

major sights of the city> you will be shown all the major sights of the city

Page 31: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• SUBSTITUTION OF RELATIVE CLAUSES WITH ADJECTIVES– E.g. The town of Chioggia, which is nearby>

the nearby town of Chioggia• OMISSION OF SUBJECT AND AUXILIARY

IN RELATIVE CLAUSES CONTAINING A PASSIVE FORM– E.g. charming little towns which are

surrounded by vineyards > charming little towns surrounded by vineyards

Page 32: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• USE OF PRESENT PARTICIPLE ISNTEAD OF FULL RELATIVE CLAUSE AS PREMODIFIER (the present participle is used as an adjective)- E.g. the little town which is charming > the charming little town

• USE OF PAST PARTICIPLE INSTEAD OF FULL RELATIVE CLAUSE AS PREMODIFIER (the past participle is used as an adjective)– E.g. one of the churches which is most fully

decorated > one of the most fully decorated churches

Page 33: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• TRANSFORMATION OF THE VERB OF THE RELATIVE CLAUSE INTO A PRESENT PARTICIPLE– E.g. the three tiers of frescoes which

represent the life of Mary > the three tiers of frescoes representing the life of Mary

• USE OF NOUN PHRASE APPOSITION TO DEFINE ANOTHER NOUN– E.g. … you’ll pass Adria, a sleepy little river

town

Page 34: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• FRONTING (THEMATIZATION) OF NON- FINITE (i.e. –ing, -ed, to) ADVERBIAL CLAUSES – E.g. Buried in the north aisle of the Chapel

of Henry VII is Elisabeth Tudor– Travelling north, we’ll stop along the way to

visit Pisa– To taste genuine food, go to one of the

local open-air street markets

Page 35: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• USE OF SUPERLATIVE FORMS(the language of tourism is a kind of extreme language in which superlatives abound)some examples:– Windsor Castle is the oldest and largest

occupied castle in the world. (Windsor Castle – leaflet)– … for old Westminster is London at its grandest (The

Original London Walks – brochure)– Some of the tower’s most famous prisoners were held

around Tower Green (The Tower of London . Brochure)

Page 36: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• USE OF THE PRESENT SIMPLE (to make the time of the holiday seem still and everlasting )– E.g. Standing alone in the vast empty tract of the

Salisbury plains and with origins dating back nearly 5,000 years, Stonehenge remains a place of wonder and mystery (Bath, Windsor & Stonehenge – brochure)

– The past is cast in stone and we take it all in: ancient Westminster Hall, the Houses of Parliament, the Tower of London and Westminster Abbey. And to see it with a great guide is to have that past suddenly rise to surface. (The original London Walks – brochure)

Page 37: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• USE OF THE IMPERATIVE (not to give orders, but to urge the tourist to avail him/herself of the opportunities which are on offer) – E.g. Gain a fascinating insight into the role of the

Crown Jewels in royal pageantry with our introductory films […] Once inside the Treasury, marvel at the Imperial State Crown worn at the Opening of Parliament and be dazzled by the world’s largest, top quality diamond, Cullinan, set in the Sovereign’s Sceptre (The Tower of London – brochure)

Page 38: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• USE OF MODAL VERBS (not to express deontic, i.e. personal or epistemic, i.e. logical meaning, but to express a way of behaviour, a mode of action to be taken by the tourist)– E.g. On the way to Westminster Abbey you will hear

about Leonardo Da Vinci, and get a chance to see a work of him. At Westminster Abbey you can hear more stories about other important people in the book like Isaac Newton, who is buried in the Abbey. A visit inside is not included, but after the tour you can go inside to explore on your own. (Quality Walking Tours, Golden Tours – leaflet)

Page 39: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SYNTACTIC FEATURES OF SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE

• SPECIAL USE OF PERSONAL PRONOUNS (to achieve the goal of ego-targetting)– E.g. London is our main course but we also serve up

wonderful side dishes in the shape of Explorer Days to Stonehenge, Oxford, Bath, Hampton Court, etc. An explorer Day is an interesting, fun and inexpensive way to get the most of our visit to these not-to-be-missed places. After all, if you’ve only got a few fleeting hours to take it all in, why spend half your time wandering around trying to get your bearings?

Page 40: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

SOME LINGUISTIC RESEARCH QUESTIONS WHICH HAVE BEEN

INVESTIGATED• Lexical aspects: collocations of main

keywords in a corpus of tourist information texts

• Syntactic aspects: degree of complexity in noun phrases taken from a subcorpus of brochures and travelogues

• Textual aspects: marked themes in tourist information texts

Page 41: TOURISM AS SPECIALIZED DISCOURSE. TOURISM HAS ONLY RECENTLY STARTED TO BE INVESTIGATED FROM A LINGUISTIC PERSPECTIVE PROBABLY BECAUSE ITS LANGUAGE MIRRORS.

THANK YOU THANK YOU FOR YOUR FOR YOUR ATTENTIONATTENTION

THANK YOU THANK YOU FOR YOUR FOR YOUR ATTENTIONATTENTION

LITTLE BY LITTLE, ONE TRAVELS LITTLE BY LITTLE, ONE TRAVELS FAR (Tolkien)FAR (Tolkien)