Exploring multimodality in English language teaching textbooks, this
book focusses on how language and image are co-deployed within these
resources in order to create and convey interpersonal meaning.
Presenting cutting-edge research in appraisal studies and multimodal
discourse analysis, Yumin Chen uses systemic functional linguistics and
social semiotics to investigate how different voices are introduced and
aligned inter-modally in textbooks, extending the appraisal systems of
engagement and graduation across language and image. The book also
demonstrates how linguistic and visual semiotic resources co-instantiate
attitude, paying special attention to the attitudinal dimension of
curriculum goals for school students of different ages. Furthermore, it
examines how different kinds of coding orientation are deployed in
various educational contexts and different constituent genres.
Demonstrating how the linguistic and semiotic theories can be adapted to
analyze multimodal texts across language and image, Interpersonal
Meaning in Multimodal English Textbooks offers new perspectives on how
to employ multimodal resources to enhance the teaching and learning of
English as a foreign language.