Digital Plagiarism in Second Language Writing: Re-Thinking Relationality in Internet-Mediated Writing
Abstract
This paper explores the complexity of digitally-mediated source-based second language writing, more specifically, complicating the presumed causality between technology and student plagiarism. Building on, and extending the existing scholarship, this discussion draws on the Deleuzian concepts of becoming, assemblage, and affect to re-think the relationality and transformations that occur when internet technology and plagiarism meet in the process of second language writers composing a major source-based research paper. Methodologically, this paper draws on interview data collected over the course of eight-weeks documenting the experiences and challenges faced by a student writer composing a term paper as part of an EAP course requirement. Rhizoanalysis is deployed to map connections between the multiple elements operating with the student writer’s assemblage and highlighting the how all elements -plagiarism, technology, literacy skills, linguistic proficiency and academic pressure- work in tandem to shape the final product, a paper submitted to evaluation.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
If this article is selected for publication in Discourse and Writing/Rédactologie, the work shall be published electronically under the terms of Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA 4.0). This license allows users to adapt and build upon the published work, but requires them to attribute the original publication and license their derivative works under the same terms. There is no fee required for submission or publication. Authors retain unrestricted copyright and all publishing rights, and are permitted to deposit all versions of their paper in an institutional or subject repository.