The language of e-mail 105
By contrast, most of my son’s contacts do add such messages.
E-mail guides are circumspect in their advice, noting that the nov-
elty, freshness, or impact of a character note quickly fades, and that
ill-chosen items can return to haunt the senders once their inter-
ests or status have moved on. ‘Cool dude’ might have suited John
Doe as an office junior, but he may not like to be reminded of his
former e-identity now he is a company vice-president. Messages
can last a long time, in e-mail archives. And, as Wallace puts it:
‘Most of us enter cyberspace... giving little thought to the online
persona – how we come across to the people with whom we interact
online.’^14
The farewell element has two important functions in e-mails, as
distinct from traditional letters. First, it acts as a boundary marker,
indicatingthatfurtherscrollingdownisunnecessary.Theremayin-
deed be additional automatically generated material on the screen,
such as an advertisement for a mailserver company, a notice saying
that the message has been checked for viruses, or a statement of
confidentiality such as the following:^15
This e-mail is confidential and should not be used by anyone who
is not the original intended recipient. If you have received this
e-mail in error please inform the sender and delete it from your
mailbo xor any other storage mechanism.
The farewell has come to indicate that no further personalized
text is following – and it is this expectation which makes the use
of postscripted text unwise. Many e-mail readers do not look be-
yond the signature. Secondly, the farewell has an extended iden-
tity function. Obviously it identifies the sender to the immediate
recipient (typically providing information which is not present
in the header, especially useful if the e-address is opaque), but it
also makes this fuller identification available to others who may
eventually see the message, in the case of forwarded or attached
mail.
(^14) Wallace (1999: 14).
(^15) Some writers, especially in the business world, place suggestions about further contact
before the farewell, as the last element in the body of the message.