This book examines reports that are written by reviewers of submissions to a peer-reviewed journal. This includes a thorough study of the reports from the perspectives of context, content and genre, as well as from the point of view of pragmatics and politeness. The author examines the use of evaluative language, and the roles reviewers assume as they make their evaluations. He also explores how reviewers learn to write these reports. He then discusses the results of these analyses from the point of view of reviewer training, making suggestions for further research in the area of editorial peer review. The demystification of this occluded genre will be of benefit to doctoral students and early career academics not yet familiar with the peer review process, as well as those working in the broader areas of English for Specific Purposes and English for Academic Purposes, discourse analysis and writing for publication.
Chapter 1: Peer Review in Academic Settings.- Chapter 2: The Genre of Reviewers Reports.- Chapter 3: Pragmatics and Reviewers Reports.- Chapter 4: Politeness and Reviewers Reports.- Chapter 5: Evaluation and Reviewers Reports.- Chapter 6: Learning to Do Peer Review.- Chapter 7: Implications for Reviewer Training.- Chapter 8: Conclusions.
I heartily recommend The Discourse of Peer Review, which skillfully synthesizes key features of reviewer reports and offers practical guidance for both academic authors and reviewers. This informative and well-researched book achieves its stated goals of demystifying the occluded peer review genre, exposing the processes associated with it, and critically examining the value systems of academic disciplines. (John S. Hedgcock, Journal of Second Language Writing, Vol. 43, March, 2019)
This book makes a useful contribution to the process, one that would be of immense value to new rlc,