Abstract

Corporate Annual Reports (CARs) are corporate communication tools which have been around for 75 years. They report company’s progress, profits and losses. At first, reports were provided in English, because they were published in an English speaking context. After a while, non-English speaking companies started to publish CARs in English to attract international investments. So far studies on CARs considered themes in text and images of CARs, subgenres of CARs, rhetorical construction, discourse and genre structure. During the last two decade; however, not many studies have been conducted on CARs from a language perspective. We aim to evaluate those studies and provide insight for further research. Findings of previous studies revealed that CARs consist of various sections functioning as sub-genres that have features of their own. Researchers so far have been interested in management forewords section as it is considered to be the most widely read section of CAR, which are supposed to gain the trust of readers. Other sub-genres studied include: operational and financial performance, corporate history and mission statements. As modern CARs are considered to be multimodal, images that appear in CARs have also been studied.

Highlights

  • According to Plung and Montgomery (2004) modern Corporate Annual Reports (CARs) are corporate communication tools which were published approximately since 1827, in the United States

  • Findings of the presented studies confirmed that there are sub-genres within the CARs that can stand as independent genres like management forewords, mission statements, corporate history, etc (Delahaye, et al, 2009; Garzone, 2004; Nickerson & De Groot, 2005; Rutherford, 2005; Williams, 2008)

  • It was revealed that CAR texts of loss-making companies and profit-making companies vary with regard to their language style and content

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Summary

Introduction

According to Plung and Montgomery (2004) modern Corporate Annual Reports (CARs) are corporate communication tools which were published approximately since 1827, in the United States. They appeared as a result of investors’ demand to receive reports of the company’s progress, profits and losses. The role and functions of CARs were not clear in their early days and issuing them has become mandatory by law since 75 years ago At first, they were rather simple; including only financial data, and were published as columns in The New York Times or The Wall Street Journal.

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