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Language and Gender CrossCulturally

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Language and Gender Cross-Culturally. Why is it important to discuss the ... Through use of proverbs, allusions and innuendo. Kabary speech and male activities ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Language and Gender CrossCulturally


1
Language and Gender Cross-Culturally
  • Why is it important to discuss the differences
    and similarities of gender-related speech?

2
Cross-cultural analysis
  • Ideology of gender enacted in language
  • Example English
  • Gender specific ways of comm
  • Universality of gender asymmetry
  • Highly valued speech and men
  • Three cross-cultural examples Malagasy,
    Javanese, Kuna

3
Malagasy (Madagascar)
  • Speech norms indirectness in speech
  • Articulated in public Kabary ceremony
  • Through use of proverbs, allusions and innuendo
  • Kabary speech and male activities

4
Women and Exclusion
  • Encourage to violate norms
  • Womens style of speech secondary
  • Indirect speech public male prestige
  • Direct speech domestic female secondary

5
Javanese Language
  • Importance of politeness for both sexes
  • Status of addressee and speaker reflected in
    speech
  • Highly stratified
  • Weak distinctions along gender lines
  • Strong ideology of gender equality
  • Differences of speech in public and private

6
Private and Public Spheres (Javanese)
  • Private
  • Women mas or older brother
  • Men dkik or younger sibling
  • Difference in seniority
  • Public
  • Women Less skillful
  • Men Greater art of polite speech

7
Kuna (Panama)
  • Egalitarian society
  • economic, political. Labor
  • Complementary separate but equal
  • Private and public contexts speech styles
  • Public --equally accessible to both genders
  • --Generally the domain of men
  • Public ---Exclusive for women

8
What do these examples tell us about the
asymmetry of the cultural evaluation of the
sexes?
  • Malagasy and Kuna Egalitarian
  • Javanese stratified
  • Malagasy and Javanese marked linguistic behavior
  • Kuna no great differences

9
Communication and Sex Differences
  • Reflection of sex differences (Chukchee)
  • --dif pronunciation by men and women
  • Or carrier of social meanings (Japanese)
  • -- uti no yatu or fellow of my home
  • -- uti no hito or person of my home

10
Gender Deixis
  • the notion that some actual linguistic elements
    are indexical of some fact about gender, maybe
    that of the speaker or that of the addressee, or
    both.
  • Men and women differ in verbal forms, etc
  • ----native American language (South Eastern)
    koasati
  • Languages with gender-exclusive patterns

11
Kúrux (Northern India)
  • Man-Man Man-Woman
    Woman-Woman Woman-Man
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --------------------------------------------------
    --------
  • 1st sg. bar-d-an bar-d-an
    bar-e-n bar-d-an
  • 1st pl. bar-d-am bar-d-am
    bar-e-m bar-d-am
  • 2nd sg. bar-d-ayi bar-d-i
    bar-d-in
    bar-d-ay
  • 2nd pl. bar-d-ar bar-d-ar
    bar-d-ayii bar-d-ar
  • 3rd sg. bar-d-as bar-d-as
    bar-d-as
    bar-d-as
  • 3rd pl. bar-n-ar bar-n-ar
    bar-n-ayii
    bar-n-ar

12
Chiquita (Bolivia)
  • Nouns
  • Identical for women
  • Mens speech nouns divided into two
  • --nouns associated to supernatural beings
    refering or talking to men
  • --not used when talking to women
  • reflects social conflicts

13
Languages with Gender-Preference Patterns
  • Gender exclusive alternatives appropriate to
    their gender
  • Gender preference language style a social or
    cultural choice
  • Japan class, seniority, gender
  • Men less polite and more assertive
  • Women more polite and less assetive

14
Choice of words depending on the context
  • Less polite forms More polite forms
  • Stomach hara onaka
  • Water mizu ohiya
  • Delicious umai oisii
  • Eat kuu taberu

15
Summary
  • Womens domestic sphere -- less value
  • Cultures evaluate gender styles in a similar way
  • Example Malagasy, Javanese and Kuna Languages
  • Ways of evaluating lang and gender relationship
  • ----Gender exclusive
  • ---- and gender-preference patterns

16
Discussion Question
  • In what ways are the relationship between
    language and gender cross-culturally similar or
    different to the relationship between language
    and race?
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