Abstract
An individual’s set of psychological traits, or their psychopathology,
impacts howthey experience theworld around them, and language offers resources that allow for that experience to be shared with and communicated to someone else. That language can then be analyzed for patterns and their connections to the psychological traits. In a forensic context, such connections may give valuable insights. There already exist psychological and linguistic approaches to the analysis of forensic texts, but the psychological approach largely lacks grounding in linguistic theory and the linguistic approach does not typically allow consideration of psychological characteristics. What this paper aims to provide
is a step toward bridging that gap. In this paper we examine the system of
attitude from the Appraisal framework developed by Martin and White (2005) and
adapted by Gales (2010) and Hurt (2020) applying this to the writings of four serial
murderers with documented mental health diagnoses. Significant patterns in the
attitudinal resources were identified quantitatively and examined qualitatively
through the lens of the psychological traits that comprised the authors’ diagnoses
to determine if there was a relationship between them. Despite the obvious
limitation presented by the sample size, the results of this study suggest the
approach presented in this paper warrants further investigation.
impacts howthey experience theworld around them, and language offers resources that allow for that experience to be shared with and communicated to someone else. That language can then be analyzed for patterns and their connections to the psychological traits. In a forensic context, such connections may give valuable insights. There already exist psychological and linguistic approaches to the analysis of forensic texts, but the psychological approach largely lacks grounding in linguistic theory and the linguistic approach does not typically allow consideration of psychological characteristics. What this paper aims to provide
is a step toward bridging that gap. In this paper we examine the system of
attitude from the Appraisal framework developed by Martin and White (2005) and
adapted by Gales (2010) and Hurt (2020) applying this to the writings of four serial
murderers with documented mental health diagnoses. Significant patterns in the
attitudinal resources were identified quantitatively and examined qualitatively
through the lens of the psychological traits that comprised the authors’ diagnoses
to determine if there was a relationship between them. Despite the obvious
limitation presented by the sample size, the results of this study suggest the
approach presented in this paper warrants further investigation.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 48-72 |
Journal | Language and Law / Linguagem e Direito |
Volume | 9 |
Issue number | 1 |
Early online date | 22 Nov 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 23 Nov 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Copyright (c) 2022 Madison Hunter, Tim Grant. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/].Keywords
- Appraisal analysis
- Stance
- Psychopathology
- Attitude
- Serial murderers