Abstract ID: 333
Part of General Paper Session (Other abstracts in this session)
Authors: Stamou, Anastasia G.; Maroniti, Katerina S.; Dinas, Konstantinos D.
Submitted by: Stamou, Anastasia G. (University of Western Macedonia, Greece)
In the present paper, we analyze how a popular Greek TV series mediates the urban vs. rural dipole through the construction of contrasting female identities. Despite the wealth of sociolinguistic studies on gender identity construction in interpersonal settings, limited research has been directed to mediated contexts (e.g. Behm 2009). Drawing upon the “identities in interaction” sociocultural linguistic model of Bucholz & Hall (2005) plus the ethnomethodological tool of “Membership Categorization Analysis” (Sacks 1992), the analysis indicates that the TV series constructs a rather schematic construction of the world by conflating the Membership Categorization Devices of “gender” and “geography”. Specifically, the category of “traditional woman”, as incarnated by the villager Stavroula, is contrasted to that of “progressive woman”, as represented by the “Athenian” Hara. Rurality is negatively associated with conservatism and oppression of women, while urbanity is attached to the positive values of progress and female emancipation. Consequently, the TV series seems to echo the naturalized binary opposition between “rural”/ “provincial” vs. “urban”/ “cosmopolitan” knitted to the construction of modernity (Bauman & Briggs 2003). However, it rather negotiates this dipole, being placed into a late modern socio-cultural context. The male protagonist and mayor of the village where the plot revolves is represented as being hostile towards urban modernity. Moreover, Hara is depicted through the category of “city person”, who holds a distorted and idealistic view of rurality, characterizing post-industrial urban people with no experience of rural life (the “rural idyll”: Cloke & Milbourne 1992). At stylistic level, the TV series does not depict, as probably expected, a straightforward relationship between rural (traditional) female identities and feminine speech style on the one hand, and urban (progressive) female identities and masculine style of talk on the other, but treats the two symbolic resources as forming a stylistic continuum along which TV characters are positioned during the display of their gender identities in specific fictional contexts. The contrasting gender identities are further constructed through other sociolinguistic resources, including specialized lexis of foods and drinks in English, Italian and French (category of “modern woman of the city”) vs. terminology of pests (category of “traditional woman of the country”).
Acknowledgement
The present research has been funded by the Greek research program Thalis (2011-2015), entitled: “Linguistic variation and language ideologies in mass cultural texts: Design, development and assessment of learning material for critical language awareness”.
References
Bauman, Richard, & Briggs, Charles L. (2003). Voices of modernity: Language ideologies and the politics of inequality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Behm, Juliane (2009). The representation of gender-specific conversational behavior in informal talk: A pragmatic analysis of the American television series “Sex and the City”.Examination thesis, Universität Rostock (http://www.hausarbeiten.de/faecher/vorschau/145958.html) (retrieved on 15th April 2011).
Bucholtz, Mary, & Hall, Kira (2005). Identity and interaction: A sociocultural linguistic approach. Discourse Studies, 7, 584–614.
Cloke, Paul, & Milbourne, Paul (1992). Deprivation and lifestyles in rural Wales II: Rurality and the cultural dimension. Journal of Rural Studies, 8, 359–371.
Sacks, Harvey (1992). Lectures on conversation I, II. In Gail Jefferson (Ed.), Oxford: Blackwell.