2 Dialogicality in academic written discourse Texts can be defined in agreement with Hoey (2001) as “the visible evidence
of a reasonably self-contained purposeful interaction between one or more
writers and one or more readers, in which the writer(s) control the interaction
and produce most of (characteristically all) the language” (ibid.: 11). This is in
accordance with Bakhtin’s view (1986) that writing is always an ongoing dialogue
between the writer and the reader(s). While producing written texts authors tend
to “draw on and incorporate ideas and forms from [their] past experiences of
texts” (Hyland 2004: 80). Accordingly, texts in general and academic texts in
particular are inevitably dialogical in the sense that any utterance is a link in a
very complexly organized chain of other utterances with which it enters into one
relation or another, but different texts of course differ in the degree of what can
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be called ‘dialogization’ (Bakhtin, as quoted in Fairclough 2003: 42) which a