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Language and Gender

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Title: Language and Gender


1
Language and Gender
2
Linguistic Anthropology and Gender some
research qs
  • How are cultural notions of gender tied up with
    ideas about language? (ideologies)
  • Are there male and female speech communities?
    (norms and rules)
  • If so, how do men and women speak or use
    language similarly or differently? (collusion)

3
Gender vs. Sex
  • Generally speaking, sex traits refer to the
    biological elements of maleness and femaleness,
    for example voice pitch.
  • Generally speaking, gender refers to the
    culturally determined ways in which we perform
    our maleness or femaleness. Examples include
    dress language occupation, role in the family,
    etc.

4
Gendered behavior
  • gendered behavior refers to behavior that has
    notably different male and female versions.
  • What are some examples of gendered behavior in
    the US?

5
Purely biological? Purely cultural?
  • Language is a learned behavior.
  • We begin learning language AND culture as soon as
    we are born.
  • For children, peer learning is as important, and
    often more important, in the development of an
    understanding of linguistic norms. Who are a
    childs peers?
  • The same linguistic behaviors mean different
    things cross-culturally.

6
How is language linked to gender?
  • Obligatory lexical/grammatical forms
  • Cultural associations with lexical/grammatical
    forms
  • Social associations between dialect forms and
    gendered identities

7
An important distinction
  • objectively observable behavior gender-linked
    use of particular forms, intonation patterns,
    etc.
  • VS
  • language attitudes ideas about mens vs.
    womens language (e.g. the idea that women tend
    to have larger vocabularies than men).

8
Lexicon and gender
  • Languages differ in how they lexicalize gender
    differences by having lexical items (words) that
    reflect sex differences
  • English has a semantic gender system
  • He-class boy, man, waiter
  • She-class girl, woman, waitress
  • He/she class doctor, teacher, cousin
  • He/she/it class dog, horse, baby
  • She/it-class ship, car

9
In contrast
  • French has a two-gender system where gender is
    marked by pronunciation differences between
    masculine and feminine Il est grand. He is
    big.
  • Elle est grande. She is big.
  • Russian often has both semantic and lexical
    differences
  • drug (male friend) podruga (female friend)

10
Grammar and gender
  • Languages also grammaticalize gender to
    different extents.
  • Examples
  • Hungarian third person singular (ö) is not marked
    for gender.
  • Spanish marks gender in plural pronouns ellas
    nosotras
  • Slavic languages mark gender in singular past
    verbs
  • Vin pishov (He left.) Vona poshla (She left.)

11
Noun classes and gender
  • Many languages divide nouns into classes that are
    often labeled masculine feminine and
    neuter. These noun classes may not be related
    to ideas about human gender at all.
  • e.g. French Russian
  • la table (f) stol
    (m)
  • le mur (m) stena
    (f)

  • dno (n)
  • Other languages, like Swahili, have noun classes,
    but they are not divided along gender lines

12
Non-obligatory gendered usage
  • Non-obligatory gendered usages result from
    cultural, not grammatical distinctions between
    genders in terms of expected linguistic
    behaviors, or gendered semantic associations
  • What are your cultural associations with
  • puce, celery, mauve, ecru, cornflower
  • Nurse
  • Mechanic

13
Semantic Asymmetries
  • Master/Mistress
  • Hes recognized as a master.
  • Shes recognized as a mistress.
  • Man/Woman
  • Hes only 14 but hes already a man.
  • Shes only 14 but shes already a woman.
  • Boy/Girl
  • How many FBI agents does it take to handle a 24
    year old girl?
  • How many FBI agents does it take to handle a
    24-year old boy?

14
Linguistic behaviors are not naturally gendered
  • In Tannens article How to give orders like a
    man, she shows that in the US, direct orders are
    associated with male power.
  • However, in other cultures, use of indirectness
    is associated with male power.

15
Directness and Indirectness
  • Directness in language is associated with
    straightforward statements and commands that are
    NOT softened or implied
  • Put it over there. Will you pick the visitor
    up at the airport? Open a window, please.
  • Indirectness in involves softening or implying
    meanings rather than stating them directly.
  • It would be great if you could put that over
    there. The visitor needs to be picked up at
    the airport. Its hot in here.

16
Hierarchy and directness (Tannen)
  • Studied transcripts from airplane crashes in
    which the co-pilot pointed out problems using
    indirectness and the pilot didnt get the point
  • BUT mitigated (indirect) speech is considered an
    element of a crew that works well together.
  • Secret to better communication lies in bosses
    being more attuned to indirect meanings

17
Indirectness in Japanese
  • Tannen gives another example of a Japanese boss
    who gave the following order
  • A place must be found, the negative brought to
    it, the picture developed. pg. 48
  • The Japanese ideology of language places
    importance on protecting the face of
    subordinates by not telling them directly what to
    do. At the same time, being able to interpret
    indirect meanings (sasshi) is considered a sign
    of maturity.

18
Language Ideology and Gender
  • Tannen article
  • In the US, dominant language ideology says
  • Directness is assertive and is associated with
    power.
  • Indirectness is submissive and is associated with
    being a subordinate.

19
Gendered Linguistic Behavior
  • In studies of English, women have been found to
    speak a more prestigious variety than men in most
    communities.
  • Womens speech in English has been found to be
    conservative where the dialect is moving away
    from the standard, and innovative where the
    dialect is moving toward the standard.

20
Why?
  • women are more invested in social advancement and
    are less invested in negative prestige
    identities, such as street tough (have lower
    vernacular loyalty)
  • Negative prestige identities (e.g. local working
    class) may be gendered as masculine, or
    feminine promiscuous
  • appearances/ good behavior and politeness are
    more important for women than men

21
Kulick Article
  • What are the gender stereotypes about male and
    female speech in Gapun?
  • What attributes are associated with men, and male
    speech?
  • What attributes are associated with women, and
    female speech?

22
Gapun
  • 2 languages spoken Taiap and Tok Pisin
  • Shift from Taiap to Tok Pisin
  • Why is Taiap associated with women, and with
    dangerous emotional displays?

23
Taiap and Tok Pisin
  • Tok Pisin is the official language of Papua New
    Guinea
  • Tok Pisin is a creole language associated with
    development projects and Christianization
  • Tok Pisin is used in public oratory that is
    associated with male prominence.
  • Taiap is the native language
  • When women use kros speech, they speak in Taiap
  • In Gapun, there is a shift away from using Taiap
    to using Tok Pisin

24
Emotion and danger
  • Why are emotions dangerous in Gapun?
  • If you dont express anger, it will rot in your
    stomach and cause sickness
  • If you do express anger, it may enrage the
    ancestral spirits of that person or the attacked
    person may seek out a sorcerer

25
hed
  • Every person has volatile free will ego,
    selfishness, maverick individualism
  • Hed is associated with children, and by
    extension, women, who are seen as being angry by
    nature and lacking self control.

26
The kros
  • For an example, see pg. 93
  • Kros is a speech genre, that is, it is a way of
    speaking that is appropriate to a certain kind of
    interaction, what we might call a fight
  • Typically shouting from inside houses, insults,
    vulgarity, accusations of wrongdoing. Associated
    with women.

27
Anger in the Mens house
  • Men also deal with anger and disputes in their
    arena, the mens house
  • Calm, encouraging men to reveal their anger, and
    cool their anger so that it will cease to make
    someone sick.
  • Typically anger is exposed, but made out to be
    small, perhaps not to be anger at all, it is
    downplayed.

28
Motivations for language shift
  • The new language is associated with positive
    ideals, like development and making money, and
    Christian values
  • The old language is associated with the ways of
    ancestors, which are increasingly negatively
    perceived
  • This community is undergoing a shift from
    speaking Taiap, to speaking Tok Pisin.

29
Three theories of gender and language
  • Social Power Model (Lakoff 70s/80s)
  • Two Cultures Model (Maltz and Borker Tannen
    80s/90s)
  • Performance model (Eckert and McConnell-Ginet
    90s - )

30
Social power vs. 2 cultures
  • Two cultures different but overlapping speech
    communities
  • Social Power
  • One speech community, with men setting the
    standard for powerful language

31
Social Power Model
  • Associated with Robin Lakoff
  • Focuses on why men and women in the US speak
    differently
  • Lakoff says that mens speech is powerful
    speech, that is, men use speech typical of
    powerful people, and women use speech typical of
    powerless people.
  • Women have been taught to act inferior when they
    act inferior, they feel inferior.

32
Examples of powerless speech
  • hedge Well, I was sorta thinking that maybe
    that we could kind of look at that tomorrow-ish.
  • deference I know that youre very busy, but I
    was hoping we could have some coffee, if you
    have the time.

33
  • self-denigration This is probably a stupid idea,
    but what about if we each write one section of
    the report?
  • I really dont know anything about this at all,
    but maybe people just dont want to pay more for
    a muffler.
  • marks of uncertainty um rising intonation at
    the end of a statement hesitant or slow speech
    quiet voice

34
Why are women more polite?
  • Studies have shown, that in general, women tend
    to be more polite across cultures.
  • Politeness is offered from inferiors to superiors
  • Politeness is typical of formality and distance
  • In cultures where women are LESS polite than men,
    it is because politeness is associated with
    acquisition of status by men.

35
Whats wrong with the power model?
  • The power model says that there is something
    wrong with the way women speak, but doesnt
    address WHY men and women speak differently.

36
Another approach 2 Cultures
  • In the Power model, men and women belong to ONE
    SPEECH COMMUNITY, where they speak more or less
    powerful varieties of the language
  • In the Two Cultures model, men and women belong
    to two different, but overlapping speech
    communities

37
Interethnic Communication
  • Sociolinguists like Gumperz and Tannen have
    studied communication and miscommunication
    between groups that have different norms for
    interaction.
  • Example high vs. low involvement conversational
    styles (NY vs. California)
  • The Bailey article on Korean store owners and
    African American customers used this approach

38
Two Cultures Model
  • Argued by Deborah Tannen, and Maltz and Borker,
    among others
  • Men and Women in the US are socialized into two
    different but overlapping cultural groups during
    same-sex peer socialization in childhood.
  • These groups have different ideas about the
    purpose of language, as well as different
    understandings of pragmatic cues

39
The basic Two Cultures idea
  • We argue that American men and women come from
    different sociolinguistic subcultures, having
    learned to do different things with words in a
    conversation, so that when they attempt to carry
    on conversations with one another, even if both
    parties are attempting to treat one another as
    equals, cultural miscommunication occurs. Maltz
    and Borker

40
The two cultures
  • Girls and boys socialized separately in
    single-sex peer groups, esp. in formative years
  • Different groups have different norms of
    interaction and goals for conversation
  • Miscommunication occurs across groups

41
The two cultures
  • Girls play in small groups or pairs emphasis is
    on emotional closeness, not hierarchy. Emphasis
    on alliance formation, betrayal, loyalty.
  • Boys play in large groups with a range of ages.
    Emphasis is on hierarchy, on moving up in the
    hierarchy, in stealing attention away from people
    who are threatening your place in the hierarchy.

42
Pickle Fights
  • Amy Sheldons work on 3-4 year olds in pre-school
    play group of 3 children. How do they resolve
    fights over a plastic pickle?
  • Boys resolved conflict by changing play themes
  • Girls resolved conflict within same play theme,
    but rearranged roles to dissolve the hierarchy.

43
Two cultures says
  • Childhood socialization translates into
    differences in the way that adult men and women
    speak with each other, and differences in how
    they interpret the same linguistic behaviors.

44
Miscommunication
  • When men and women talk to each other, it is a
    form of cross-cultural miscommunication. Men
    and womens goals for conversation may be very
    different due to different worldviews

45
Male/female worldviews in Two cultures model
  • Male Emphasis on social hierarchy, personal
    position within hierarchy, emphasis on individual
    accomplishments, independence
  • Female Emphasis on social harmony, equality,
    concern for feelings of others, de-emphasis of
    self and selfs accomplishments emphasis on
    collaboration avoidance of hierarchy

46
For example
  • According to 2 cultures
  • Women tend to use questions to maintain
    conversation, show interest and respect for the
    speakers story
  • Men tend to see questions as requests for
    information, or even as challenges to their
    authority to speak.

47
according to 2 cultures
  • Women share experiences to promote solidarity and
    intimacy.
  • Men discuss problems in order to solve them.

48
Behavior and worldview
  • Men have more strategies for dominating
    conversation
  • Interrupt frequently
  • Often dont acknowledge or link their statement
    to a previous statement from an interlocutor
  • Make many declarations of fact
  • Often dispute claims of their interlocutor
  • Women do the shitwork of conversation
  • ask a lot of questions
  • use the pronouns you and we frequently
  • If women are interrupted, they tend to stop
    speaking
  • Say yes, right and uhuh frequently

49
Social Power vs. Two Cultures differing
analysis of key features
  • Positive Minimal Responses (PMRs)
  • mmhm, yeah, right, uhuh
  • In the US, men use far fewer than women on
    average
  • Social power says
  • Men withhold PMRs as a way of showing their
    power
  • Women offer a lot of PMRs to puff up the person
    they are talking to
  • Two cultures says
  • For men, PMRs signal agreement
  • For women, PMRs signal Im listening
  • How does this lead to miscommunication?

50
  • Questions
  • Social Power model argues that the less powerful
    ask questions the more powerful answer questions
  • Two cultures says that men and women see
    different reasons to ask questions
  • Men see questions as requests for information
  • Women see questions as a way of maintaining
    smooth conversational flow (men will just
    introduce a new topic to keep a conversation
    going)

51
  • Aggressiveness (e.g. disagreement)
  • Social power says that men are displaying their
    power by cutting down women
  • Two cultures says that men are taught to organize
    conversations through oppositions. Women view
    opposition as negative and a personal attack.

52
The new model Performance
  • Performance theory focuses on community standards
    for judging the genderedness of linguistic
    behavior in a given instance.
  • Gets away from men do this women do that BUT
    acknowledges that there are power differentials
    in society that may be performed as part of
    performing gender identity.

53
Example
  • Article by Deborah Cameron on Performing Gender
    Identity
  • focused on how young, heterosexual men performed
    their gender identity in all-male conversations
  • the conversations focused on other men, their
    actions, and their dress. In this context,
    performance of male, heterosexual identity
    focused on referring to other men as gay
  • Clearly, in another context, linguistic
    performance of male, heterosexual identity would
    not depend on the same use of features.
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