Monday, 13 April 2015

LANGUAGE & GENDER THEORIES

The three theories that I have researched are, semantic derogation, sexist language and dominance. In today’s written/spoken language, it is claimed that some terms are reserved when referring to women. These are pairs of terms that historically differentiated by sex alone, but which, over time, have gained different connotations (e.g. of status or value) and in some cases different denotations. Also studies of language and gender often make use of two models – dominance and difference. Language can also sometimes change when certain dominance takes place.

In semantic derogation, the terms used when referring to women can have a negative, yet strong connotation attached to them when compared to the corresponding term used to refer to men. In many lexical pairs the male term suggests a positive attribute while the female term suggests a negative one, also known as lexical asymmetry.

  •   Sara Mills (1995)                        
  •  Deborah Cameron (1990)
  •  Muriel Schultz (1975)

The three researchers above had made studies during that year on lexical asymmetry. They found that, for example, a male would be called ‘master’, whereas a female would be called ‘mistress’ – the male term suggests a positive attribute while the female term suggests a negative one. They also found other lexical pairs such as, ‘lord’ and ‘lady’ that have experience dramatic shifts in meaning. ‘Lord’ suggests a high status, whereas ‘lady’ is more widely used. Mills has also undergone semantic deterioration, shown in its use in terms such as ‘dinner lady’ and ‘cleaning lady’ – contrasts here with the rather absurd sounding ‘cleaning lord’. Also, Mills finds out that ‘bachelor’ retains positive connotations of a free-spirited, independent lifestyle, as in ‘bachelor party’ and ‘bachelor pad’ has more negative connotations. These examples have made the English language sound sexist.

Julia Stanley looked at sexism in the English language during the 1970s. In 1973, she claimed that there was a marked inequality in the number of words for a sexually promiscuous females and males. The results were: 200 words for sexually promiscuous female and 20 for males. Most of the ‘female’ words had negative connotations. In 1977 Stanley found that women occupy negative semantic space due to marked forms, for example, ‘lady doctor’ and ‘female surgeon’.

Dominance is a theory explained in two ways by Don Zimmerman, Candace West and Deborah Tannen.

Don Zimmerman and Candace West found that in mixed-sex conversations men are more likely to interrupt than women. In 1975 they recorded various conversations at the Santa Barbara campus of the University of California. The subjects of the recording were white, middle class and under 35. Zimmerman and West produce in evidence 31 segments of conversation. They report that in 11 conversations between men and women, men used 46 interruptions, but women only two. From their small sample Zimmerman and West conclude that, since men interrupt more often, then they are dominating or attempting to be.

Deborah Tannen explains that men grow up in a world in which conversation is competitive - they seek to achieve the upper hand or to prevent others from dominating them. For women, however, talking is often a way to gain confirmation and support for their ideas. Tannen found that men see the world as a place where people try to gain status and keep it, whereas women see the world as “a network of connections seeking support and consensus”.

Tuesday, 18 November 2014

Mini Sagas

50 word stories


He Loves Me Not
“He loves me” I pause.
          I watched every individual petal that delicately fluttered to the ground. Each time one landed, my heart skipped a beat because I was scared of losing him. I looked at the last petal before I pulled it away from the sepal, “He loves me not.”

Days Later
I can still feel his warmth; the radiance of his smile when we met, 426 days ago. My love for him was uncontrollable. Now, I feel the same emptiness I did 427 days ago, when the bus slowly pulled him away from me for the last time, 348 days later.

Sunburn
His smile is the one thing that gets me through the day. I love the way his lips curve at both corners. The way his one dimple crinkles as his face lifts upwards. The warm glow his happiness gives. His smile is a ray of sunshine, and I am sunburnt.

My Everything
I looked at him as a friend, until I realised I loved him. His smile, his laugh, his eyes, his everything, I loved everything about him. But he didn’t feel the same way. So he got up and left and never turned back around. Every atom of me missed him.

When You’re Gone

Every time I visit her my knees get weak. She always brings out the better side of me, one I never knew existed. It feels like such a blessing just to be in her presence. However, each time I leave the cemetery, heavy-hearted and lonely; I wish we’d never met. 

Thursday, 2 October 2014

Are you serious? Put down that doughnut!

Are you lazy? Do you sit around at home eating junk food because you’re bored? Well put down that doughnut, because doughnuts are bad for you.


So is loud music, no exercise and lie-ins. However, doughnuts contain a lot of sugar, and when I say a lot, I mean A LOT. One Chocolate Dreamcake in Krispy Kreme has 389kcal (calories). If you take that out from your daily intake you have, 2,111kcal left if you're male, and if you’re female you have 1,611kcal intake. That’s almost a whole chicken korma, WITH naan bread! A lot of the time people can't be bothered to go to Tesco or Asda, so they just rummage around in their freezer, looking for that fatter, yet perfect meal – and I’m one of those people.
                Today however, I had the two greatest meals of my life. Firstly... Grilled cheese. Since you weren't there to enjoy it with me, let me describe it to you in all of its cheesy goodness. Picture this, two perfectly brown toasted slices of thick hovis bread (most likely drenched in butter, or at least one can hope), stuffed with melting cheddar cheese, 2 slices of thick bacon, an egg and some freshly ground pepper. The sandwich is served alongside fruit chutney and tangy dijon mustard.

                Secondly, I had Chinese sausage carbonara. Here, the Chinese sausage basically stands in for the bacon. They have quite a few similarities; salty, porky, fatty. Salty crisp meat, creamy eggy sauce, and noodles –this is comfort food at its best.
                So next time you pick up that frozen bag of chips, look in the fridge and cook something worth looking for. Now both of these meals will be cooked every week. It’s quick, simple, easy to make, and bonus: I didn't even go to the grocery store.




In the style of "Want to silence a two-year-old? Try teaching it to ride a motorbike" by Charlie Brooker.
-02.10.14-