The Third Man: Pseudo-Objectivity and the Voice of Passivity

One of the hallmarks of academic language is the use of the third person. Developed as an academic register primarily in the natural sciences, it is seen as having an air of objectivity. Consequently, it has been mandated in a range of disciplines where the values of objectivity and detachment ar...

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Main Author: Thomas Hoy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UiTM Publisher 2006-06-01
Series:Asian Journal of University Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.rmc.uitm.edu.my/images/stories/AJUE/vol2-no1/bab%206.pdf
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author Thomas Hoy
author_facet Thomas Hoy
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description One of the hallmarks of academic language is the use of the third person. Developed as an academic register primarily in the natural sciences, it is seen as having an air of objectivity. Consequently, it has been mandated in a range of disciplines where the values of objectivity and detachment are less clear-cut. Students are issued with blanket instructions such as, “Never write in the first person.” The problem is that sometimes the nature and content of the task is such that the only appropriate and honest voice to use is the first person. I describe a number of cases I have encountered in my work as an academic skills adviser where students have been asked to respond to tasks which call primarily on their personal observations, insights and experiences. In being told to record such accounts in the third person, students are being asked to surrender their position of personal authority. The effect is corrosive; students lose confidence in themselves and their ideas. Potentially rich writing becomes bland and corporatist. I suggest a number of strategies that could give students more autonomy in their use of academic language. The choice of voice should never be totally conventional. There are times when the third person should shut up and let someone else speak.
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spelling doaj.art-7326b7b7ce4f45a7b7b1464dc39a12882022-12-22T02:14:16ZengUiTM PublisherAsian Journal of University Education1823-77971823-77972006-06-012199109The Third Man: Pseudo-Objectivity and the Voice of PassivityThomas Hoy One of the hallmarks of academic language is the use of the third person. Developed as an academic register primarily in the natural sciences, it is seen as having an air of objectivity. Consequently, it has been mandated in a range of disciplines where the values of objectivity and detachment are less clear-cut. Students are issued with blanket instructions such as, “Never write in the first person.” The problem is that sometimes the nature and content of the task is such that the only appropriate and honest voice to use is the first person. I describe a number of cases I have encountered in my work as an academic skills adviser where students have been asked to respond to tasks which call primarily on their personal observations, insights and experiences. In being told to record such accounts in the third person, students are being asked to surrender their position of personal authority. The effect is corrosive; students lose confidence in themselves and their ideas. Potentially rich writing becomes bland and corporatist. I suggest a number of strategies that could give students more autonomy in their use of academic language. The choice of voice should never be totally conventional. There are times when the third person should shut up and let someone else speak.https://www.rmc.uitm.edu.my/images/stories/AJUE/vol2-no1/bab%206.pdffirst personthird personobjectivitysubjectivitsubjectivity
spellingShingle Thomas Hoy
The Third Man: Pseudo-Objectivity and the Voice of Passivity
Asian Journal of University Education
first person
third person
objectivity
subjectivit
subjectivity
title The Third Man: Pseudo-Objectivity and the Voice of Passivity
title_full The Third Man: Pseudo-Objectivity and the Voice of Passivity
title_fullStr The Third Man: Pseudo-Objectivity and the Voice of Passivity
title_full_unstemmed The Third Man: Pseudo-Objectivity and the Voice of Passivity
title_short The Third Man: Pseudo-Objectivity and the Voice of Passivity
title_sort third man pseudo objectivity and the voice of passivity
topic first person
third person
objectivity
subjectivit
subjectivity
url https://www.rmc.uitm.edu.my/images/stories/AJUE/vol2-no1/bab%206.pdf
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