Means of Arguments in Bank's Annual Reports Inst. Nareeman Jabbar Rasheed Al- Ta'i, Ph.D Means of Arguments in Bank's Annual Reports Inst. Nareeman Jabbar Rasheed Al- Ta'i, Ph.D
محتوى المقالة الرئيسي
الملخص
Abstract
In line with the most recent trends in genre analysis (Swales, 1990; Bahatia,
1993) and discourse studies on business communication (Dudley-Evans and St. John,
1998; Bargiela-Chiappini, F. and C. Nickerson, 1999, the article focuses on a
particular financial genre, Bank's Annual Reports (ARs). More in detail, in contrast
with widespread claim about the purely financial and informative nature of ARs,
addressing experts only, this paper aims at illustrating in accordance with Bexley and
Hynes (2003), and Burrough's (1986) considerations, that those reports endeavour to
promote the company image and to leave a positive impression on readers. Generally
speaking, companies communicate because they exist: they have a name,
headquarters, offices, a logotype, and provide consumers with products and services
that help people to come closer to the company's reality (Brioschi, 1990:51).
However, another type of communication exists, this of argumentation: it is essential
to inform the public about the company's activities, to charge its mind (Cantoni, Di
Blas, 2002) and to make it act in a certain way. Thus, argumentation aims at
convincing the counterpart that a thesis should (not) be accepted by using reasonable
arguments that impress the hearer/ reader. It can be said that more specifically;
argumentation can be found in an extremely important economic and financial texts:
the ARs. These are considered comprehensible not only to experts but also the
layman: they develop arguments that are within everyone's reach; they use plain
language and effective stylistic devices in order to be readable to delightful and
convincing to the public (Mignini, 2005:1).
Some research so far has been based on the definition as well as the content
analysis of ARs, and on their writing's techniques and strategies, but few had taken
into account their argumentative stylistic features and discursive (in the sense of
other-than-purely-financial) sections.
There has been no much research focusing on argumentation in the economic
and financial world up-to-now; in this paper we shall examine how argumentation is
carried on in banks ARs, what the most exploited topics are, and how they are
arranged to win the public over. A glance at the textual structure is given first so as to
have an idea about how the readers are introduced into the bank's world. Then, an
analysis of the most common topics and the way they are usually presented (their
argument) is provided: examples are also given in order to clarify the content.
The corpus of material gathered for the analysis includes four Bank's ARs. All
the selected ARs are published on the web between 2003 and 2006 by the following
prestigious big banks: Deutsche bank (2003), Bank of England Annual Report (2004),
Raiffeisen Centrobank (2005), and Bank of America (2006).
تفاصيل المقالة
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