A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Någon särskild ansökan behöver inte göras – Opersonliga konstruktioner i myndighetstexter på svenska och finska i Finland och Sverige
Authors: Eveliina Tolvanen
Publisher: Föreningen för nordisk filologi
Publication year: 2016
Journal: Folkmålsstudier
Volume: 54
First page : 115
Last page: 141
Self-archived copy’s web address: http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2016082923224
Abstract
Impersonal constructions in pension authorities’ texts in Swedish and Finnish in
Finland and Sweden
The focus of this study lies on the use of impersonal constructions that have an indirect reference to either the writer or the reader of the text in institutional texts about pensions. The studied constructions include passive without agent, nominalizations, infinite verb constructions and constructions with the pronoun man ‘one’ in Swedish, and constructions with so-called zero person in Finnish. The data includes four groups of texts: texts published in Swedish and Finnish in Finland and texts published in Swedish and Finnish in Sweden. The texts have been published by Kela, the social security institution in Finland, and Pensionsmyndigheten, the Swedish Pensions Agency, in 2012. The theoretical framework for the study consists of systemic-functional linguistics (SFL, mainly Halliday & Matthiessen 2004, Thompson &
Thetela 1995, Thompson 2003).
The impersonal constructions in the data are analyzed with regard to who they refer to. The results show that impersonal passive constructions tend to refer to the writer, i.e. the pensions authority in question, whereas infinite verb constructions, the pronoun man and zero person typically refer to the reader. Furthermore, impersonal constructions have both ideational, textual and interpersonal functions in the texts.
Keywords: Swedish, Finnish, Finland-Swedish, Sweden-Finnish, impersonality, institutional communication, comparative analysis, SFL
Impersonal constructions in pension authorities’ texts in Swedish and Finnish in
Finland and Sweden
The focus of this study lies on the use of impersonal constructions that have an indirect reference to either the writer or the reader of the text in institutional texts about pensions. The studied constructions include passive without agent, nominalizations, infinite verb constructions and constructions with the pronoun man ‘one’ in Swedish, and constructions with so-called zero person in Finnish. The data includes four groups of texts: texts published in Swedish and Finnish in Finland and texts published in Swedish and Finnish in Sweden. The texts have been published by Kela, the social security institution in Finland, and Pensionsmyndigheten, the Swedish Pensions Agency, in 2012. The theoretical framework for the study consists of systemic-functional linguistics (SFL, mainly Halliday & Matthiessen 2004, Thompson &
Thetela 1995, Thompson 2003).
The impersonal constructions in the data are analyzed with regard to who they refer to. The results show that impersonal passive constructions tend to refer to the writer, i.e. the pensions authority in question, whereas infinite verb constructions, the pronoun man and zero person typically refer to the reader. Furthermore, impersonal constructions have both ideational, textual and interpersonal functions in the texts.
Keywords: Swedish, Finnish, Finland-Swedish, Sweden-Finnish, impersonality, institutional communication, comparative analysis, SFL
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