Genre Analysis of Rhetorical Moves in Libyan MA Thesis Abstracts
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36602/faj.2026.n21.13Keywords:
genre analysis, academic abstracts, CARS model, rhetorical moves, intercultural rhetoricAbstract
This paper presents a detailed genre analysis of Master of Arts (MA) thesis abstracts written by Libyan students in Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL) and Applied Linguistics. Utilizing John Swales’ (1990) Create a Research Space (CARS) model, the study examines a corpus of 20 abstracts through a mixed-method approach to investigate how novice scholars rhetorically structure their research summaries. The analysis reveals a universal, formulaic adherence to the Introduction-Methods-Results-Discussion ( IMRD) structure and the three CARS moves, indicating strong foundational training. Notable strengths include meticulous methodological description and clear presentation of aims and findings. Distinctive features include a pronounced orientation toward localized, practice-oriented justification of the research niche, a descriptive rather than persuasive rhetorical tone, and minimal engagement with prior international literature. When considered within the framework of intercultural rhetoric, these patterns reflect not a deficit but a strategic adaptation to the Libyan socio-educational context and a specific developmental stage in scholarly writing. The study concludes with a three-stage pedagogical framework designed to scaffold Libyan postgraduate students’ transition from competent local reporters to persuasive, globally engaged scholars.
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