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71470
Language and gender
Descripción
Mapa Mental sobre Language and gender, creado por tom4413 el 05/05/2013.
Mapa Mental por
tom4413
, actualizado hace más de 1 año
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Creado por
tom4413
hace más de 11 años
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Resumen del Recurso
Language and gender
Men and women use language differently
Trudgill 1983
Found women's social class accents closer to RP than mens
Cheshire 1982
Studied adolescent girls and boys, boys tended to use more non-standard grammatical forms
Using standard English and RP gives person overt prestige, women tend to seek
Possible explanations for women using more prestigious forms than men
Less secure in terms of social status
Society expects higher standards of behaviour from women
Men already have higher social status than women
Non-standard language associated with working class men
Tough, down to earth qualities
Women's politeness
Robin Lakoff features characteristic of women's language 1975
Hedges and fillers
Apologetic requests
Tag questions
In their data men more tag questions than women - Dubois and Crouch 1975
Indirect requests
Approaches to difference in language use
Other explanations
Courtroom trials - O'Barr and Atkins 1980
Low social status or inexperienced aspects Lakoff called women's
Women's language not weakness but desire to cooperate - Holmes 1984
Few differences, situation affects more than gender - Cameron 2007
Interrupting is dominant? - Beattie 1982
Deficit - Robin Lakoff 1975
Women speak less than men
Women less expletives
More intensifiers
Features of women's language reflect inferior social status
Women's language weaker and prevents women being taken seriously
Dominance - Zimmerman and West 1975
Recorded interruptions, 96% men
Men dominant in male-female convos reflects men's dominance in society
Difference - Tannen 1990
Men concerned with
Status and independence
Direct orders and don't mind conflict
Facts and problem solving
Women concerned with
Forming bonds
Avoiding conflict through politeness
Understanding through compromising
Supporting
Represented differently
Marked terms
Generic terms
Lexical asymmetry
Patronising terms
Sexism
3rd person masculine pronoun 'he' or 'his' refers to both sexes
More insults for women
Animal theme
Lots for promiscuity
Sara Mills list 1995
Positive connotations for men promiscuity
Views on avoiding sexist language
Can be frustrating or pointless
Sexist language avoiding and changing
Sex discrimination act 1975
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