The emergence of the identity of a fictional expert advice-giver in an American Internet advice column
Date Issued
2006-01-01
Author(s)
Hoffmann, Sebastian
DOI
10.1515/text.2006.004
Abstract
This paper is a contribution to research on the expression of expert advicegiving (e.g., Heritage and Sefi 1992; Silverman et al. 1992). We present a linguistic analysis of the ways in which the identity of the fictional expert advisor Lucy emerges in an Internet advice column run by professional health educators as part of a university health service. In discourseanalytical close readings of 280 question-answer records, we identify and discuss seven recurring strategies (the advisor's name, self-reference and use of address terms; expert information-giving; giving options and making readers think; the choice of vocabulary; o¤ering opinions; the use of empathy; the display of humor), which together contribute to Lucy's voice as an expert advice-giver if the readers repeatedly access the question-answer exchanges. This emerging identity is in line with the site's mission to provide information designed to facilitate independent and responsible decision processes and corresponds to an ideal of nondirectiveness, as also identified in the literature on other advisory settings (He 1994; Sarangi and Clarke 2002; Vehviläinen 2003). The constructed identity of Lucy thus makes 'Lucy Answers' an attractive site to (re)turn to for advice and complements the other services provided by the health educators.
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
Name
Locher_and_Hoffmann_2006_identity_advice_TandT.pdf
Size
197.35 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum
(MD5):2eb1ed3b06c74c287fd29113b36c82aa