This book offers up-to-date insights into the long-standing controversy
of whether or not Chinese learners of English adequately express their
attitudes in written English. It compares four writing datasets from
three groups of student writers (e.g., English-speaking students'
English texts, Chinese-speaking students' Chinese texts, and both
English and Chinese texts produced by the same group of Chinese-speaking
students majoring in English), and applies the appraisal framework, an
analytical tool developed in the field of Systemic Functional
Linguistics. The book provides a nuanced view of the deployment of
attitudinal patterns and the linguistic resources used for attitudinal
evaluation in Chinese students' English writing. Accordingly, it offers
a valuable resource for all those interested in second language writing,
contrastive rhetoric, second language acquisition and systemic
functional linguistics.