Abstract
Abstract
This article investigates the extent to which TED talks can be considered a narrative register. This study
analyses ‘narrative versus non-narrative discourse’ (Biber 1988) in a corpus of TED
talks (n = 2483). TED talks were found to be typically non-narrative (−2.47 mean). However, there was a great
degree of variation, with approximately 10% of talks (n = 257) classified as narrative. When TED talks were
compared to registers in prior studies they were close to academic prose and presented a similar pattern in terms of disciplinary
variation, with ‘soft’ disciplines closer to narratives. When textual data was examined, the average TED talk was found to weave
narrative and descriptive elements, but were found to be more descriptive overall.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics