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15 Identifying The Origins Of Evidential Texts
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Published:October 2006
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Abstract
The most frequent general criticism I receive is, I think, upon the style,—’if I would but change my style’! But that is an objection (isn’t it?) to the writer bodily? Buffon says, and every sincere writer must feel, that ‘Le style c’est l’homme’; a fact, however, scarcely calculated to lessen the objection with certain critics.Shepherd and Mortimer provided a series of methods for examining evidential texts 15.01 through which they identify anomalies which might be useful in understanding or criticising witness testimony. This chapter returns to the examination of evidential textsfrom a linguistic perspective and demonstrates how such an approach can deepen ourunderstanding of witness statements and on occasion provide forensic linguistic evidence for the origins of texts brought before the courts.
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