Jump to content

Language and gender

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Cnilep (talk | contribs) at 06:22, 22 May 2024 (plural). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Research into the many possible relationships, intersections and tensions between language and gender is diverse. It crosses disciplinary boundaries, and, as a bare minimum, could be said to encompass work notionally housed within applied linguistics, linguistic anthropology, conversation analysis, cultural studies, feminist media studies, feminist psychology, gender studies, interactional sociolinguistics, linguistics, mediated stylistics, sociolinguistics, and feminist language reform and media studies.

In methodological terms, there is no single approach that could be said to 'hold the field'. Discursive, poststructural, ethnomethodological, ethnographic, phenomenological, positivist and experimental approaches can all be seen in action during the study of language and gender, producing and reproducing what Susan Speer has described as 'different, and often competing, theoretical and political assumptions about the way discourse, ideology and gender identity should be conceived and understood'.[1] As a result, research in this area can perhaps most usefully be divided into two main areas of study: first, there is a broad and sustained interest in the varieties of speech associated with a particular gender; also a related interest in the social norms and conventions that (re)produce gendered language use (a variety of speech, or sociolect associated with a particular gender which is sometimes called a genderlect).[2] Second, there are studies that focus on ways language can produce and maintain sexism and gender bias,[3] and studies that focus on the contextually specific and locally situated ways in which gender is constructed and operationalized.[2] In this sense, researchers try to understand how language affects the gender binary in society.[4]

The study of gender and language in sociolinguistics and gender studies is often said to have begun with Robin Lakoff's 1975 book, Language and Woman's Place, as well as some earlier studies by Lakoff.[5] The study of language and gender has developed greatly since the 1970s. Prominent scholars include Deborah Tannen, Penelope Eckert, Janet Holmes, Mary Bucholtz, Kira Hall, Deborah Cameron, Jane Sunderland and others. The 1995 edited volume Gender Articulated: Language and the Socially Constructed Self[6] is often referred to as a central text on language and gender.[7]

History of gender and language

Verbal language has been around for over 150,000 years and non-verbal communication has existed since the beginning of the first bipedal locomotive species. Homo sapiens began evolving 150,000 years ago along with tool use, cultural practices, and communication with other hunter-gatherers to get their kill or gather different varieties of fruits. Men and women worked together well to continue to adapt and survive. The term "genderlect", which means the difference between how men and women communicate, was coined by Robin Lakoff. In other words, it is a way of speaking that tends to be characteristic of a certain gender. The linguist Deborah Tannen introduced this term in her book titled You Just Don't Understand: Women and Men in Conversation. Tannen was inspired by Lakoff, who wrote the book Language and Woman's Place (Lakoff 1975). Tannen proposed that men and women tend to have different styles of communication, and these differences can be so significant that they are almost like different dialects or 'genderlects'. According to Tannen, "For most women, the language of conversation is primarily a language of rapport: a way of establishing connections and negotiating relationships. For most men, talk is a primary means to preserve independence and negotiate and maintain a status in the hierarchical social order" (Tannen 1990 p. 77).[8] Males tend to focus on who is up and who is down, while females tend to focus on the closeness/distance dimension, though both are concerned with both. There is a power dynamic between male and female, female and female, and male and male. Tannen addresses gender differences as a type of cross-cultural communication and emphasizes that they occur in addition to geographic, ethnic, class, age and many other cultural influences.

History and development of the field

The early studies on the notion of language and gender are combined into the fields of linguistics, feminist theory, and political practice.[9] The feminist movement of the 1970s and 1980s started to research on the relationship between language and gender. These researches were related to the women's liberation movement, and their goal was to discover the linkage between language usage and gender asymmetries. Since, feminists have been working on the ways that language is maintaining the existing patriarchy and sexism.[3]

Difference/Deficit models (1970s)

Early work on language and gender began by noticing ways in which women's language deviated from the presumed default, or men's, language practices. In 1975 Robin Lakoff identified a "women's register", which she argued served to maintain women's (inferior) role in society.[10] Lakoff argued that women tend to use linguistic forms that reflect and reinforce a subordinate role. These include tag questions, question intonation, and "weak" directives, among others (see also Speech practices associated with gender, below).[11] This research was influential in questioning research on language that only looked at men's language practices and recognizing that gendered differences in language exist. However, not long after the publication of Language and Woman's Place, other scholars began to produce studies that both challenged Lakoff's arguments and expanded the field of language and gender studies.[5][11]

Another early approach was the deficit model, which defines adult male language as the standard, and women's language as deficient.[12] This approach created a dichotomy between women's language and men's language. This triggered criticism to the approach in that highlighting issues in women's language by using men's as a benchmark. As such, women's language was considered to have something inherently 'wrong' with it. Studies such as Lakoff's Language and Woman's Place have been labeled the "deficit approach", since they posit that one gender is deficient in terms of the other. Descriptions of women's speech as deficient can actually be dated as far back as Otto Jespersen's "The Woman", a chapter in his 1922 book Language: Its Nature and Development, and Origin.[12] While later work has problematized Jespersen's view of women as inferior, of the chapter's language from a modern perspective, Jespersen's contributions about the prospect of language change based on social and gendered opportunity, lexical and phonological differences, and the idea of genderlects and gender roles influence language remain relevant. One refinement of the deficit argument is the so-called "dominance approach", which posits that gender differences in language reflect power differences in society.[13]

Dual culture and dominance models (1980–1990s)

Dual cultures is an approach of equality, differentiating men and women as belonging to different 'sub-cultures' as they have been socialized to do so since childhood. This then results in the varying communicative styles of men and women. Deborah Tannen is a major advocate of this position.[14] Tannen compares gender differences in language to cultural differences. Comparing conversational goals, she argues that men tend to use a "report style", aiming to communicate factual information, whereas women more often use a "rapport style", which is more concerned with building and maintaining relationships.[14] Scholars including Tannen and others argue that differences are pervasive across media, including face-to-face conversation,[15][16] written essays of primary school children,[17] email,[18] and even toilet graffiti.[19]

Dominance is an approach whereby women are seen as the subordinate group whose difference in style of speech results from male supremacy and also possibly an effect of patriarchy. This results in a primarily male-centered language. Scholars such as Dale Spender[20] and Don Zimmerman and Candace West[21] subscribe to this view. One of the most outstanding sentiments in these studies is the concept of power. Researchers have been trying to understand the patterns of language to show how it can reflect the power imbalance in society. Some of them believe that men have social advantages which can be seen in the men's usage of language. Also, some of them think that there are women's disadvantages in society which are reflected in language.[9] For example, some feminist language researchers have tried to find how the advantages of men had manifested in language. They argue how, in the past, philosophers, politicians, grammarians, linguists, and others were men who have had control over language, so they entered their sexist thoughts in it as a means to regulate their domination.[22]

Some scholars problematize both the dominance and the dual cultures approach. Deborah Cameron notes that throughout the history of scholarship on language and gender male-associated forms have been seen as the unmarked norm from which the female deviates.[23] For example, the norm 'manager' becomes the marked form 'manageress' when referring to a female counterpart. On the other hand, Cameron argues that what the difference approach labels as different ways of using or understanding language are actually displays of differential power. Cameron suggests, "It is comforting to be told that nobody needs to 'feel awful': that there are no real conflicts, only misunderstandings. ... But the research evidence does not support the claims made by Tannen and others about the nature, the causes, and the prevalence of male-female miscommunication."[24] She argues that social differences between men's and women's roles are not clearly reflected in language use. One additional example is a study she has done on call center operators in the UK, where these operators are trained to be scripted in what they say and to perform the necessary 'emotional labor' (smiling, expressive intonation, showing rapport/empathy and giving minimal responses) for their customer-callers. This emotional labor is commonly associated with the feminine domain, and the call center service workers are also typically women. However, the men working in this call center do not orient to the covertly gendered meanings when they are tasked to perform this emotional labor. While this does not mean that the 'woman's language' is revalued, nor does this necessarily call for a feminist celebration, Cameron highlights that it is possible that with time, more men may work in this service industry, and this may lead to a subsequent "de-gendering" of this linguistic style.[25]

Social constructionist models (2000s)

The dynamic or social constructionist approach is the most current approach to language and gender. Instead of speech falling into a natural gendered category, the dynamic nature and multiple factors of an interaction help a socially appropriate gendered construct. As such, West and Zimmerman describe these constructs as "doing gender" instead of the speech itself necessarily being classified in a particular category.[26] This is to say that these social constructs, while affiliated with particular genders, can be utilized by speakers as they see fit.

Communication styles are always a product of context, and as such, gender differences tend to be most pronounced in single-gender groups. One explanation for this, is that people accommodate their language towards the style of the person they are interacting with. Thus, in a mixed-gender group, gender differences tend to be less pronounced. A similarly important observation is that this accommodation is usually towards the language style, not the gender of the person. That is, a polite and empathic man will tend to be accommodated to on the basis of their being polite and empathic, rather than their being a man.[27]

However, Ochs argues that gender can be indexed directly and indirectly.[28] Direct indexicality is the primary relationship between linguistics resources (such as lexicon, morphology, syntax, phonology, dialect and language) and gender. For example, the pronouns "he" and "she" directly indexes "male" and "female". However, there can be a secondary relationship between linguistic resources and gender where the linguistic resources can index certain acts, activities or stances which then indirectly index gender. In other words, these linguistic resources help constitute gender. Examples include the Japanese particles "wa" and "ze". The former directly index delicate intensity, which then indirectly indexes the female "voice" while the latter directly indexes coarse intensity, which then indirectly indexes the male "voice".

Language and power

In the past, many feminist language researchers used to believe that power is something separate from language, which helps powerful groups, for example, men, to dominate the way language is being produced and used in society.[9] Nowadays, some researchers consider that power is embedded in the language structures rather than being outside of it.[9] For instance, the language of science helps to regulate the ideas of the dominant groups in it, which can never be completely neutral.[29] Even in psychology, the interpretations of gender had always some benefits for the academics who were writing about it, so it was always important that who is using the language and how they are using it to explain something.[29]

The norms of appropriate ways of talking for different genders are an example of the concept of power in language.[9] There are many social forces to determine the ways different genders are supposed to communicate with each other.[9] As these norms are the results of the present hierarchy in society, doubting them leads to challenging the social orders which originate these patterns.[9] Many studies in this field presume that there are gender differences in language use; therefore, they examine how different genders vary in their speech styles. However, this approach does not incorporate the debate that who, initially, decided to set these differences and norms, and why these norms are generally accepted.[9] "Language is a complex and dynamic system that produces meaning about social categories such as gender".[9] In this sense, power is not something outside this system, but it is a part of it.[9]

The notion of gender is not static. Rather, this notion varies from culture to culture and from time to time.[9] "Feminine" and "masculine" are socially constructed concepts that through a set of repeated acts, have become natural.[3] Simone de Beauvoir's famous dictum manifests this idea: "One is not born, but rather becomes a woman."[30] Accordingly, performing acts following social norms leads to the phenomenon of gendered speech. As femininity and masculinity are not fixed concepts, their style of talking can also be a result of power relations in society regulating social standards.[3]

In each society, the notion of gender is learned from early childhood through conversation, humour, parenting, institutions, media, and other ways of imparting knowledge. Hence, gender seems a natural and even scientific concept to all the individuals of a society. Many scholars have been trying to not only find the truth behind this common sense but also understand why this concept is taken for granted. This kind of research requires questioning some underlying assumptions about gender, and approaching this concept from a different point of view.[31] Gender is not something people are born with, but people learn to perform and act based on the expected norms of it, which has nothing to do with physiology and hormones.[32]

In the matter of linguistic competence – the ability to produce knowledge and understand it via language – sociolinguistic and linguistic anthropologists believe that knowledge of structure and morphology alone cannot help a person to communicate with others. Instead, they think that one needs to know the social norms people use in different languages to interact with them. People gradually learn how to use language in specific social situations and develop communicative competence. Therefore, language and social norms are dynamic and interconnected. As people use language concerning these norms, it plays a vital role in manifesting and sustaining social standards[31] and can be a tool for reproducing power relations and gender oppression.[33] One of the examples to show this interconnection would be the fact that there is no equivalent for "sir" to use in addressing a female authority. This fact cannot be related to the language itself, but it is correlated to the perception that authorities have always been male.[31] The other example is the way women get addressed by Miss, Mrs., or Ms., while men are only addressed by Mr., which is a term that shows their gender, not marital status. Unlike men, women's relationships can affect their social status, and they can be judged and qualified based on it.[3]

Language and symbolism

Language is one of the most powerful ways of communicating with a wide variety of people in different contexts. Humans look for symbolism and meaning in the world. Language is a way of communicating how a person perceives the world and how one builds connections with oneself and others. Linguistic abilities hold power and change through the lens of culture and gender. According to Susan Gal in the book Language, Gender, and Power, "Such visions are inscribed in language, and most important, enacted in interaction. Although women's everyday talk and women's voice or consciousness have been studied separately, I have argued that both can be understood as strategic responses, often of resistance, to dominate hegemonic cultural forms" (Gal 1997).[34] Dominant language is assumed through the male perspective and is considered assertive, direct, and a need for the individual to express their needs and desires. The other form of speech is submissive which many people assume is the female voice which consists of indirectness, politeness, and a focus on the listener's needs. These stereotypes are culturally based and are not always the reality of how individuals communicate or view the world. According to Robin Lakoff's book, Language and A Woman's Place, "It will be found that the overall effect of 'women's language' – meaning both language restricted in use to women and language descriptive of women alone – is this: it submerges a woman's personal identity, by denying her the means of expressing herself strongly, on the one hand, and encouraging expressions that suggest triviality in subject matter and uncertainty about it; and, when a woman is being discussed, by treating her as an object – sexual or otherwise – but never a serious person with individual views" (Lakoff 1975).[35] Women were expected to be polite and not as direct to fit the gender perceived role of women being homemakers and emotional which is not an accurate statement in today's society, although it differs from society to society. Men were given more privileges than women in American society and that power dynamic created an unequal playing field for many years.

Language practices associated with gender

Not all members of a particular gender may follow the specific gender roles that are prescribed by society.[36] Scholars of language and gender are often interested in patterns of gendered communication, and these patterns are described below, however, not every member of that gender may fit into those patterns.

Minimal responses

One of the ways in which the communicative behaviors of men and women differ is in their use of minimal responses, i.e., paralinguistic features such as 'mm' and 'yeah', which is behaviour associated with collaborative language use.[37] Men generally use them less frequently than women, and when they do, it is usually to show agreement, as Don Zimmerman and Candace West's study of turn-taking in conversation indicates.[38]

While the above can be true in some contexts and situations, studies that dichotomize the communicative behavior of men and women may run the risk of overgeneralization. For example, "minimal responses appearing "throughout streams of talk", such as "mm" or "yeah", may only function to display active listening and interest and are not always signs of "support work", as Fishman claims. They can—as more detailed analysis of minimal responses show—signal understanding, demonstrate agreement, indicate scepticism or a critical attitude, demand clarification or show surprise.[39] In other words, both male and female participants in a conversation can employ these minimal responses for interactive functions, rather than gender-specific functions.

Questions

Some research has argued that men and women differ in their use of questions in conversations. For men, a question is usually a genuine request for information whereas with women it can often be a rhetorical means of engaging the other's conversational contribution or of acquiring attention from others conversationally involved, techniques associated with a collaborative approach to language use.[40] Therefore, women use questions more frequently.[15][41] However, a study carried out by Alice Freed and Alice Greenwood in 1996 showed that there was no significant difference in the use of questions, such as "you know?" between genders.[42] In writing, however, both genders use rhetorical questions as literary devices. For example, Mark Twain used them in "The War Prayer" to provoke the reader to question his actions and beliefs. Tag questions are frequently used to verify or confirm information, though in women's language they may also be used to avoid making strong statements.[10]

Turn-taking

As the work of Victoria DeFrancisco shows, female linguistic behaviour characteristically encompasses a desire to take turns in conversation with others, which is opposed to men's tendency towards centering on their own point or remaining silent when presented with such implicit offers of conversational turn-taking as are provided by hedges such as "y' know" and "isn't it".[43] This desire for turn-taking gives rise to complex forms of interaction in relation to the more regimented form of turn-taking commonly exhibited by men.[44]

Changing the topic of conversation

According to Bruce Dorval in his study of same-sex friend interaction, males tend to change subject more frequently than females.[45] This difference may well be at the root of the conception that women chatter and talk too much. Goodwin observes that girls and women link their utterances to previous speakers and develop each other's topics, rather than introducing new topics.[46]

However, a study of young American couples and their interactions reveal that while women raise twice as many topics as men, it is the men's topics that are usually taken up and subsequently elaborated in the conversation.[39] An examination of conversational topics pursued by men and women reveals notable differences. Dunbar, Marriot and Duncan found that men display self-promoting conversational behaviors.[47] This can look like discussing achievements at work or competitive leisure activities. Researchers discovered that this behavior increases when women are present in the conversation.[47] Women, however, converse more about personal topics, such as children, family, and health. This social-networking behavior was rarely found in conversations held by older men.[47] These content differences also impact the linguistic features of conversations. One study that examined 8,353 text-message conversations found that women used past tense verbs in conversation more than men,[48] a reflection of their tendency to discuss past events and information related to people. In the same study, men used numbers in conversation more often than women did.[48] These figures supported their discussions of money, sports and the workplace.[48]

Self-disclosure

Self-disclosure is not simply providing information to another person. Instead, scholars define self-disclosure as sharing information with others that they would not normally know or discover. Self-disclosure involves risk and vulnerability on the part of the person sharing the information.[49] Deborah Tannen's work argues that men and women have different views of self-disclosure, that women have a tendency toward self-disclosure, i.e., sharing their problems and experiences with others, often to offer sympathy,[50] which contrasts with men's tendencies to non-self disclosure and professing advice or offering a solution when confronted with another's problems.[14]

Research has been conducted to examine whether self-disclosure in adult friendship differs according to gender and marital status. Sixty-seven women and fifty-three men were asked about intimate and non-intimate self-disclosure to closest same-sex friends. Disclosure to spouse among married respondents was also assessed. Married people's non-intimate disclosure to friends was lower than that of unmarried people, regardless of gender. Married people's intimate disclosure to their spouses was high regardless of gender; in comparison, married men's intimate disclosure to their friends was low, while married women's disclosure to their friends was moderate or even as high as disclosure to their spouses. The results suggest that gender roles are not the only determinant of gender differences in disclosure to friends. Marital status appears to have an important influence on disclosure in friendship for men but not for women. It was concluded that research on gender differences in self-disclosure and friendship has neglected an important variable, that of marital status.[51]

While there are some gendered stereotypes and expectations about self-disclosure, other research shows that people have the ability to still self disclose very clearly regardless of masculine or feminine communication traits. "Sex consistently failed to predict subjects' willingness to self-disclose, both within and across contexts, whereas femininity promoted self-disclosure in the context that was clearly social and expressive in character. Although masculinity failed to exert the expected facilitative impact on self-disclosure within the instrumental context, it nonetheless influenced the results; androgynous subjects, who scored high in both masculinity and femininity, were more self-revealing across contexts than was any other group."[52]

Self-disclosure has also been researched within the context of heterosexual couples,[53] as self-disclosure is considered to be a key factor in facilitating intimacy. For example, American heterosexual couples were studied using various measures twice a year. By using the average scores of both partners, they found that self-disclosure was higher in those couples who remained together at the second administration of the surveys than in those who broke up between two administrations. Similarly, researchers asked heterosexual couples who had just begun dating to complete a self-disclosure measure and to answer the same questionnaire four months later. They found that couples who were still dating four months later reported greater self-disclosure at the initial contact than did those who later broke up.[54] This work shows self-disclosure can be beneficial to facilitating a positive relationship.

Verbal aggression

Aggression can be defined by its three intersecting counterparts: indirect, relational and social. Indirect aggression occurs when the victim is attacked through covert and concealed attempts to cause social suffering. Examples are gossiping, exclusion or ignoring of the victim. Relational aggression, while similar to indirect, is more resolute in its intentions. It can be a threat to terminate a friendship or spreading false rumors. The third type of aggression, social aggression, "is directed toward damaging another's self-esteem, social status, or both, and may take direct forms such as verbal rejection, negative facial expressions or body movements, or more indirect forms such as slanderous rumors or social exclusion."[55] This third type has become more common in adolescent, both male and female, behavior.[56]

Dr. M.K. Underwood, leading researcher in child clinical psychology and developmental psychology, began using the term social aggression in several of her experiments.[57] In one study, Underwood followed 250 third-graders and their families in order to understand how anger is communicated in relationships, especially in face-to-face and behind-the-back situations. It was found that technology and electronic communication has become a key factor in social aggression. This discovery has been termed cyber-bullying. In another experiment, social aggression was used to see if verbal and nonverbal behaviors contributed to a person's social value.[55] It was found that those who communicated nonverbal signals were seen as angry and annoyed by their peers. In a third study, the experimenters determined that while socially aggressive students were vastly disliked, they were alleged to be the popular kids and had the highest marked social status. Most research has been based on teacher assessments, case studies and surveys.

For years, all research on aggression focused primarily on males because it was believed females were non-confrontational. Recently however, people have realized that while "boys tend to be more overtly and physically aggressive, girls are more indirectly, socially, and relationally aggressive."[56] In a study done measuring cartoon character's aggressive acts on television, these statistics were found:[58]

  • 76.9% of physical aggression was committed by male characters
  • 23.1% of physical aggression was committed by female characters
  • 37.2% of social aggression was committed by male characters
  • 62.8% of social aggression was committed by female characters

Listening and attentiveness

In a conversation, meaning does not reside in the words spoken, but is filled in by the person listening. Each person decides if they think others are speaking in the spirit of differing status or symmetrical connection. The likelihood that individuals will tend to interpret someone else's words as one or the other depends more on the hearer's own focus, concerns, and habits than on the spirit in which the words were intended.[14]

It appears that women attach more weight than men to the importance of listening in conversation, with its connotations of power to the listener as confidant of the speaker. This attachment of import by women to listening is inferred by women's normally lower rate of interruption – i.e., disrupting the flow of conversation with a topic unrelated to the previous one[59] – and by their largely increased use of minimal responses in relation to men.[38] Men, however, interrupt far more frequently with non-related topics, especially in the mixed sex setting and, far from rendering a female speaker's responses minimal, are apt to greet her conversational spotlights with silence, as the work of Victoria DeFrancisco demonstrates.[43]

When men talk, women listen and agree. However men tend to misinterpret this agreement, which was intended in a spirit of connection, as a reflection of status and power. A man might conclude that a woman is indecisive or insecure as a result of her listening and attempts of acknowledgment. When in all actuality, a woman's reasons for behaving this way have nothing to do with her attitudes toward her knowledge, but are a result of her attitudes toward her relationships. The act of giving information frames the speaker with a higher status, while the act of listening frames the listener as lower. However, when women listen to men, they are not necessarily thinking in terms of status, but in terms of connection and support.[14]

Heterosexual relationships

As described above, there are certain stereotypes society places on the way men and women communicate. Men are stereotyped to be more of a public speaker and leader, while women are stereotyped to talk more in private among their family and friends. For women, society views their use of communication as a way to express feelings and emotions. For men, society views their use of communication as a way to express power and negotiate status among other individuals.[14] There are also certain societal stereotypes about how men and women communicate within a heterosexual marriage or relationship. When a man and a woman are communicating within their relationship, the traditional language roles are altered. The man becomes more passive and the woman becomes more active. A man's stereotypical silent communication style is often disappointing for women, while a woman's emotionally articulate communication style is often seen as aggravating for a man.[14] This creates the assumption that women and men have opposing communication styles, therefore creating society's cliche that men and women don't understand each other.

Dominance versus subjection

This, in turn, suggests a dichotomy between a male desire for conversational dominance – noted by Helena Leet-Pellegrini with reference to male experts speaking more verbosely than their female counterparts – and a female aspiration to group conversational participation.[60] One corollary of this is, according to Jennifer Coates, that males are afforded more attention in the context of the classroom and that this can lead to their gaining more attention in scientific and technical subjects, which in turn can lead to their achieving better success in those areas, ultimately leading to their having more power in a technocratic society.[61]

Conversation is not the only area where power is an important aspect of the male/female dynamic. Power is reflected in every aspect of communication from what the actual topic of the communication, to the ways in which it is communicated. Women are typically less concerned with power and more concerned with forming and maintaining relationships, whereas men are more concerned with their status. Girls and women feel it is crucial that they be liked by their peers, a form of involvement that focuses on symmetrical connection. Boys and men feel it is crucial that they be respected by their peers, as form of involvement that focuses on asymmetrical status.[62] These differences in priorities are reflected in the ways in which men and women communicate. A woman's communication will tend to be more focused on building and maintaining relationships. Men on the other hand, will place a higher priority on power, their communication styles will reflect their desire to maintain their status in the relationship.

According to Tannen's research, men tend to tell stories as another way to maintain their status. Primarily, men tell jokes, or stories that focus on themselves. Women on the other hand, are less concerned with their own power, and therefore their stories revolve not around themselves, but around others. By putting themselves on the same level as those around them, women attempt to downplay their part in their own stories, which strengthens their connections to those around them.

Politeness

Lakoff identified three forms of politeness: formal, deference, and camaraderie. Women's language is characterized by formal and deference politeness, whereas men's language is exemplified by camaraderie.[10]

There is a generalization about conservativeness and politeness in women's speech. It is commonly believed that women are gentle, while men are rough and rude. Since there is no evidence for the total accuracy of this perception, researchers have tried to examine the reasons behind it. Statistics show a pattern that women tend to use more "standard" variable of the language.[63] For example, in the case of negative concord, e.g., I didn't do anything vs. I didn't do nothing, women usually use the standard form.[3] Pierre Bourdieu introduced the concept of the linguistic marketplace. According to this concept, different varieties of language have different values. When people want to be accepted in a diplomatic organization, they need to have a range of knowledge to show their competency. Possessing the right language is as important as the right style of dress. Both of these manners have social values.[64] While Bourdieu focuses on the diplomatic corps, it would be true if people want to be accepted in other contexts such as an urban ghetto. The market that one wants to engage with has a profound effect on the value of the variation of language they may use.[65] The relations of each gender to linguistic markets are different. A research on the pronunciation of English in Norwich has shown that women's usage is considerably more conservative regarding the standard variation of the language they speak. This research provides the pieces of evidence that women's exclusion from the workplace has led to this variation.[66] As women in some cases have not had the same position as men and their opportunities to secure these positions have been fewer, they have tried to use more "valuable" variations of the language. It can be the standard one, or the polite version of it, or the so-called "right" one.[3]

Gender differences in political communication

Situational context is another factor that affects verbal and non-verbal communication behaviors based on gender. In male-dominated fields, such as politics,[67] women employ a balance of masculine and feminine behaviors to appear both competent and likable to an audience of male peers.[68] In a study that reviewed speeches given by female members of the United States Congress throughout the 2010s, congresswomen performed masculine verbal behavior (i.e., accusations, attacks on character) similarly to male members of Congress, but congresswomen performed more feminine non-verbal behaviors (i.e., smiling, facial expressions, varied tone of voice) compared to their male counterparts.[68] Gender differences in political communication also appear in political arenas outside of the United States. In a study of speeches given by members of the United Kingdom's Parliament, female parliamentarians were found to use concrete examples or personal anecdotal evidence to support their arguments more than male parliamentarians.[69] Male parliamentarians, on the other hand, were found to base their arguments in abstract descriptions of groups or issues.[69] Additionally, the presence of a female MP increased female parliamentarians' participation in political debates.[69]

Children's television

A specific area of study within the field of language and gender is the way in which it affects children's television. Mulac et al.'s "Male/Female Language Differences and Attributional Consequences in Children's Television" focuses on identifying differing speech patterns of male versus female characters in popular children's television programs at the time (the 1980s).[70] The data gathered by Mulac et al. comes from a two-week period in 1982 from three Public Broadcasting Service daytime programs and three categories from commercial network programs (action, comedy/adventure, and commercials) that aired on Saturdays. They analyzed randomly selected interactive dialogue taken once from every ten minutes of their tapes. Mulac et al. collected data for 37 language variables, from which they determined the thirteen that showed significant differences between usage by male and female characters. Mulac et al.'s definitions of these thirteen features are as follows:[70]

Vocalized Pauses Utterance without semantic meaning (uh, um, etc.)
Verbs (See verb page)
Uncertainty Verbs Verb phrase that shows some level of uncertainty ('I'm not sure if...', 'It might be', etc.)
Action Verbs Verbs that specify physical action
Present Tense Verbs Verb phrases in the present tense, including but not limited to habitual actions and historical present
Adverbials Begin Sentence Tells how, when, or where a sentence or phrase takes place ('Yesterday, I went to Taco Bell')
Justifiers Gives reason/justification for a previous utterance or action
Judgmental Adjectives Indicates a personal and subjective opinion/evaluation
Concrete Nouns Nouns that can be perceived by one or more of the five senses
Subordinating Conjunctions After, as soon as, until, etc. (See subordinating conjunctions)
Grammatical Errors Utterances which are viewed incorrect by a prescriptivist grammar
Polite Forms Utterances that express some degree of politeness

The following tended to be higher in frequency for males: vocalized pauses, action verbs, present tense verbs, justifiers, subordinating conjunctions, and grammatical "errors". On the other hand, the following were found to occur more for females: total verbs, uncertainty verbs, adverbials beginning sentences, judgmental adjectives, concrete nouns, and polite forms. In addition, female characters had longer sentences on average.[70]

Another facet of Mulac et al.'s research was to gather participants' subjective ratings on characters' socio-intellectual status (high/low social status, white/blue collar, literate/illiterate, rich/poor), dynamism (aggressive/unaggressive, strong/weak, loud/soft, active/passive), and aesthetic quality (pleasing/displeasing, sweet/sour, nice/awful, beautiful/ugly), based on the transcripts from the shows' dialogue.[70]

Aubrey's 2004 study "The Gender-Role Content of Children's Favorite Television Programs and Its Links to Their Gender-Related Perceptions" identifies gender stereotypes in children's television programs and evaluates the effects of these stereotypes on children's personal gender-role values and interpersonal attraction.[71] Aubrey chose shows for the study based on children's responses when asked to name their favorite television program (the top-named show was Rugrats, followed by Doug). Some of the stereotypes found in the study pertain to language/communication, but most are stereotypes or attributes of the characters such as assertiveness, aggression, emotionality, and cattiness.[71] In regards to language, the study found that male characters were more likely to ask questions, assert opinions, and direct others than female characters.[71] Female characters, on the other hand, were more likely to "receive or make comments about body or beauty" than their male counterparts.[71]

In general, Aubrey found less stereotypical content for female characters than for male, which they recognize to be a possible effect of either the higher presence of male characters or the difficulty of measuring passivity.[71]

Transgender linguistics

While much work on language and gender has focused on the differences between people of binary genders (men and women) and cisgender people, with the rise of social constructionist models of language and gender scholarship, there has been a turn towards explorations of how individuals of all genders perform masculinity and femininity (as well as other gendered identities) through language.[72]

Early work on transgender people's voice/language came out of speech pathology, as many transgender people undergo specific voice therapies (voice feminization for transgender women and voice masculinization for transgender men) as part of their transition.[73] Within sociocultural linguistics, Lal Zimman's work has been influential in developing the field of trans linguistics.[74][75] Within the context of US and English-speaking trans and gender diverse communities, linguistic features at various levels, whether phonetic features (e.g., pitch and /s/ production),[76][77][78] lexical items (e.g., body part names and pronouns),[79][80][81] and semiotic systems (e.g., linguistic and aesthetic style),[82] have been shown to be important resources for naming trans identities and for constructing and communicating these identities to the world. Sociophonetic research within trans communities has explored how the gendered voice is constructed, performed, and heard.[83] Lexical analyses have shown how labels and pronouns have allowed non-normative gender individuals to claim linguistic agency over their own experience of gender as well as to challenge and reclaim pathological terminology ascribed by doctors and psychologists.[84]

Gender-specific vocabulary

Some natural languages have intricate systems of gender-specific vocabulary.

  • Irish Sign Language, due to single sex Deaf schools, developed separate male and female vocabularies which can still be seen today.
  • Some Australian Aboriginal communities, such as the Warlpiri, have auxiliary sign languages which are primarily used by older women. Men typically know a few signs, but do not sign extensively. This distinction has emerged because women observe a speech taboo during mourning and learn sign to communicate during this period, although they continue to use the language with other women even after the taboo is lifted.[85]
  • It is speculated that Sumerian women had a special language called Emesal, distinct from the main language, Emegir, which was spoken by both genders. The women's language had a distinct vocabulary, found in the records of religious rituals to be performed by women, also in the speech of goddesses in mythological texts. There has been some dispute about the role of Emesal, with suggestions by some scholars that Emegir was a dialect used by the public and more informally while Emesal was a literary language.[86]
  • For a significant period of time in the history of the ancient languages of India, after the formal language Sanskrit diverged from the popular Prakrit languages, some Sanskrit plays recorded the speech of women in Prakrit, distinct from the Sanskrit of male speakers. This convention was also used for illiterate and low-caste male speakers.[87]
  • Garifuna has a vocabulary split between terms used only by men and terms used only by women. This does not however affect the entire vocabulary but when it does, the terms used by men generally come from Carib and those used by women come from Arawak.[citation needed]
  • The indigenous Australian language Yanyuwa has separate dialects for men and women.[88]
  • In Ancient Greek, there is evidence for some difference between the speech of men and women, as evidenced for example in the comedies of Aristophanes.[citation needed]
  • In the Lakota language, a small number of enclitics (approximately eight) differ in form based on the gender of the speaker. While many native speakers and linguists agree that certain enclitics are associated with particular genders, such usage may not be exclusive. That is, individual men sometimes use enclitics associated with women, and vice versa.[89]

See also

References

  1. ^ Speer, Susan (2005). "Introduction: feminism, discourse and conversation analysis". In Speer, Susan A. (ed.). Gender talk: feminism, discourse and conversation analysis. London New York: Routledge. pp. 7–8. ISBN 9780415246446.
  2. ^ a b Attenborough, Frederick (2014-05-02). "Words, Contexts, Politics". Gender and Language. 8 (2): 137–146. doi:10.1558/genl.v8i2.137. ISSN 1747-6321.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Coates, Jennifer; Pichler, Pia, eds. (2011). Language and gender : a reader (2nd ed.). Chichester, West Sussex, U.K.: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 9781405191449. OCLC 659305823.
  4. ^ Gormley, Sarah (2015), "Language and Gender", International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences, Elsevier, pp. 256–259, doi:10.1016/b978-0-08-097086-8.53055-4, ISBN 978-0-08-097087-5
  5. ^ a b Bucholtz, Mary (2004) [1975]. "Editor's introduction". In Lakoff, Robin; Bucholtz, Mary (eds.). Language and woman's place: text and commentaries. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 3–14. ISBN 9780195167573.
  6. ^ Hall, Kira; Bucholtz, Mary, eds. (1995). Gender articulated: language and the socially constructed self. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781136045424.
  7. ^ Holmes, Janet; Meyerhoff, Miriam, eds. (2003). The handbook of language and gender. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Pub. ISBN 9780631225027.
  8. ^ Tannen, Deborah (2007). You Just Don't Understand: Women and Men in Conversation. New York: 1st Harper pbk. ed.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Weatherall, Ann (2002). Gender, language and discourse. Hove [England]: Routledge. ISBN 0203988817. OCLC 71813163.
  10. ^ a b c Lakoff, Robin (2004) [1975]. Language and woman's place: text and commentaries. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195167573.
  11. ^ a b Wolfram, Walt; Schilling-Estes, Natalie, eds. (2006). American English: dialects and variation (2nd ed.). Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Pub. ISBN 9781405112666.
  12. ^ a b Jespersen, Otto (2013) [1922]. "The woman". Language: its nature, development, and origin. Hamlin Press. ISBN 9781473302310.
  13. ^ O'Barr, William; Atkins, Bowman (1980). "'Women's language' or 'powerless language'". In Borker, Ruth; Furman, Nelly; MacConnel-Ginet, Sally (eds.). Women and language in literature and society. New York: Praeger. pp. 93–110. ISBN 9780030578939.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g Tannen, Deborah (1990). You just don't understand: women and men in conversation. New York, NY: Morrow. ISBN 9780060959623.
  15. ^ a b Fitzpatrick, Mary Anne; Mulac, Anthony; Dindia, Kathryn (March 1995). "Gender-preferential language use in spouse and stranger interaction". Journal of Language and Social Psychology. 14 (1–2): 18–39. doi:10.1177/0261927x95141002. S2CID 145296984.
  16. ^ Hannah, Annette; Murachver, Tamar (June 1999). "Gender and conversational style as predictors of conversational behavior". Journal of Language and Social Psychology. 18 (2): 153–174. doi:10.1177/0261927x99018002002. S2CID 146518770.
  17. ^ Mulac, Anthony; Studley, Lisa B.; Blau, Sheridan (November 1990). "The gender-linked language effect in primary and secondary students' impromptu essays". Sex Roles. 23 (9–10): 439–470. doi:10.1007/bf00289762. S2CID 144610138.
  18. ^ Thomson, Rob; Murachver, Tamar (June 2001). "Predicting gender from electronic discourse". British Journal of Social Psychology. 40 (2): 193–208. doi:10.1348/014466601164812. PMID 11446227.
  19. ^ Green, James A. (September 2003). "The writing on the stall: gender and graffiti". Journal of Language and Social Psychology. 22 (3): 282–296. doi:10.1177/0261927X03255380. S2CID 144331193.
  20. ^ Spender, Dale (1998). Man made language (2nd ed.). London New York New York: New York University Press. ISBN 9780863584015.
  21. ^ West, Candace; Zimmerman, Don H. (1983). "Small insults: a study of interruptions in conversations between unacquainted persons". In Thorne, Barrie; Kramarae, Cheris; Main Henley, Nancy (eds.). Language, gender, and society. Rowley, Massachusetts: Newbury House. pp. 102–117. ISBN 9780883772683.
  22. ^ Spender, Dale. (1985). Man made language (2nd ed.). London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 0710203152. OCLC 12072141.
  23. ^ Cameron, Deborah (2012). Verbal hygiene. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon New York: Routledge. ISBN 9786613954404.
  24. ^ Cameron, Deborah (2007). The myth of Mars and Venus: do men and women really speak different languages. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199214471.
  25. ^ Cameron, Deborah (August 2000). "Styling the worker: gender and the commodification of language in the globalized service economy". Journal of Sociolinguistics. 4 (3): 323–347. doi:10.1111/1467-9481.00119. Pdf.
  26. ^ West, Candace; Zimmerman, Don H. (June 1987). "Doing Gender". Gender & Society. 1 (2): 125–151. doi:10.1177/0891243287001002002. JSTOR 189945. S2CID 220519301. Pdf.
  27. ^ Thomson, Rob; Murachver, Tamar; Green, James (March 2001). "Where Is the gender in gendered language?". Psychological Science. 12 (2): 171–175. doi:10.1111/1467-9280.00329. PMID 11340928. S2CID 44597261.
  28. ^ Ochs, Elinor (1992). "Indexing gender". In Duranti, Alessandro; Goodwin, Charles (eds.). Rethinking context : language as an interactive phenomenon. Cambridge England New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 335–357. ISBN 9780521422888.
  29. ^ a b Henley, Nancy. (1977). Body politics : power, sex, and nonverbal communication. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0130796409. OCLC 2646276.
  30. ^ Beauvoir, Simone de (2009). Borde, Constance; Malovany-Chevallier, Sheila (eds.). The second sex. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 9780224078597. OCLC 429598256.
  31. ^ a b c Eckert, Penelope (2003). McConnell-Ginet, Sally (ed.). Language and gender. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-511-07765-3. OCLC 57419689.
  32. ^ West, Candace; Zimmerman, Don H. (1987). "Doing Gender". Gender and Society. 1 (2): 125–151. doi:10.1177/0891243287001002002. ISSN 0891-2432. JSTOR 189945. S2CID 220519301.
  33. ^ Castro, Olga. "Introduction: Gender, language and translation at the crossroads of disciplines". Gender and Language. doi:10.1558/genl.v7i1.5. S2CID 144942425.
  34. ^ Gal, Susan (1997). Linguistic Anthropology (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 427.
  35. ^ Lakoff, Robin (1975). Language and woman's place. New York: Robin Lakoff Harper & Row.
  36. ^ Tannen, Deborah (1996). Gender and discourse. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195101249.
  37. ^ Carli, Linda L. (November 1990). "Gender, language, and influence". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 59 (5): 941–951. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.59.5.941.
  38. ^ a b Zimmerman, Don H.; West, Candace (1975). "Sex roles, interruptions and silences in conversation". In Thorne, Barrie; West, Candace (eds.). Language and sex: difference and dominance. Rowley, Massachusetts: Newbury House Publishers. pp. 105–129. ISBN 9780883770436.
  39. ^ a b Fishman, Pamela (February 1977). "Interaction: The work women do". Social Problems. 24 (3): 387–400. doi:10.2307/800091. JSTOR 800091. PMC 7485939. PMID 32921838.
  40. ^ Barnes, Douglas (1971). "Language and learning in the classroom". Journal of Curriculum Studies. 3 (1): 27–38. doi:10.1080/0022027710030104.
  41. ^ Todd, Alexandra Dundas (1993). "A diagnosis of doctor-patient discourse in the prescription of contraception". In Fisher, Sue; Todd, Alexandra Dundas (eds.). The social organization of doctor-patient communication. Norwood, New Jersey: Ablex Pub. Corp. pp. 183–212. ISBN 9780893916992.
  42. ^ Freed, Alice F.; Greenwood, Alice (March 1996). "Women, men, and type of talk: What makes the difference?". Language in Society. 25 (1): 1–26. doi:10.1017/S0047404500020418. S2CID 145500836.
  43. ^ a b DeFrancisco, Victoria Leto (October 1991). "The sounds of silence: how men silence women in marital relations". Discourse & Society. 2 (4): 413–423. doi:10.1177/0957926591002004003. S2CID 145790027.
  44. ^ Sacks, Harvey; Schegloff, Emanuel A.; Jefferson, Gail (December 1974). "A simple systematics for the organization of turn-taking for conversation". Language. 50 (4 (part 1)): 696–735. doi:10.1353/lan.1974.0010. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-002C-4337-3. JSTOR 412243. S2CID 210072635.
  45. ^ Dorval, Bruce, ed. (1990). Conversational organization and its development. Advances in Discourse Processes. Vol. XXXVIII. Norwood, New Jersey: Ablex. ISBN 9780893916633.
  46. ^ Goodwin, Majorie Harness (1990). He-said-she-said: talk as social organization among Black children. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253206183.
  47. ^ a b c Dunbar, R. I. M.; Marriott, Anna; Duncan, N. D. C. (September 1997). "Human conversational behavior". Human Nature. 8 (3): 231–246. doi:10.1007/BF02912493. ISSN 1045-6767. PMID 26196965. S2CID 1151885.
  48. ^ a b c Newman, Matthew L.; Groom, Carla J.; Handelman, Lori D.; Pennebaker, James W. (2008-05-15). "Gender Differences in Language Use: An Analysis of 14,000 Text Samples". Discourse Processes. 45 (3): 211–236. doi:10.1080/01638530802073712. ISSN 0163-853X. S2CID 7160120.
  49. ^ Borchers, Tim (1999). "Interpersonal communication: self-disclosure". Allyn & Bacon. Archived from the original on 20 July 2012. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
  50. ^ Dindia, Kathryn; Allen, Mike (July 1992). "Sex differences in disclosure: A meta-analysis". Psychological Bulletin. 112 (1): 106–124. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.112.1.106. PMID 1388280.
  51. ^ Derlega, Valerian J.; Metts, Sandra; Petronio, Sandra; Margulis, Stephen T. (1993). Self-disclosure. Newbury Park: Sage Publications. ISBN 9780803939554.
  52. ^ Ashida, Sato; Koehly, Laura M.; Roberts, J. Scott; Chen, Clara A.; Hiraki, Susan; Green, Robert C. (December 2009). "Disclosing the disclosure: factors associated with communicating the results of genetic susceptibility testing for Alzheimer's disease". Journal of Health Communication. 14 (8): 768–784. doi:10.1080/10810730903295518. PMC 2801901. PMID 20029710.
  53. ^ MacNeil, Sheila; Byers, E. Sandra (2009-02-03). "Role of Sexual Self-Disclosure in the Sexual Satisfaction of Long-Term Heterosexual Couples". Journal of Sex Research. 46 (1): 3–14. doi:10.1080/00224490802398399. ISSN 0022-4499. PMID 19012061. S2CID 8723727.
  54. ^ MacNeil, Sheila; Byers, E. Sandra (April 2005). "Dyadic assessment of sexual self-disclosure and sexual satisfaction in heterosexual dating couples". Journal of Social and Personal Relationships. 22 (2): 169–181. doi:10.1177/0265407505050942. ISSN 0265-4075. S2CID 145299560.
  55. ^ a b Blake, Jamilia J.; Kim, Eun Sook; Lease, A. Michele (July 2011). "Exploring the incremental validity of nonverbal social aggression: the utility of peer nominations". Merrill-Palmer Quarterly. 57 (3): 293–318. doi:10.1353/mpq.2011.0015. JSTOR 23098048. S2CID 146188437. Pdf.
  56. ^ a b Willer, Erin K.; Cupach, William R. (2011). "The meaning of girls' social aggression: nasty or mastery?". In Cupach, William R.; Spitzberg, Brian H. (eds.). The dark side of close relationships II. New York London: Routledge. pp. 297–316. ISBN 9780415804585.
  57. ^ Underwood, M.K. (2011). Speech | Keynote Speaker. Collin College Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Student Research Conference. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  58. ^ Luther, Catherine A.; Legg Jr., J. Robert (2010). "Gender differences in depictions of social and physical aggression in children's television cartoons in the US". Journal of Children & Media. 4 (2): 191–205. doi:10.1080/17482791003629651. S2CID 145582028.
  59. ^ Fishman, Pamela (May 1977). "Interactional shitwork" (PDF). Heresies: A Feminist Publication on Art and Politics. Vol. 1, no. 2. pp. 99–101. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 March 2017.
  60. ^ Leet-Pellegrini, Helena M. (1980). "Conversational dominance as a function of gender and expertise". In Giles, Howard; Robinson, W. Peters; Smith, Philip M. (eds.). Language: social psychological perspectives: selected papers from the first International Conference on Social Psychology and Language held at the University of Bristol, England, July 1979. Oxford New York: Pergamon Press. pp. 97–104. ISBN 9780080246963.
  61. ^ Coates, Jennifer (2016). Women, men and language : a sociolinguistic account of gender differences in language (3rd ed.). Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon New York, NY: Routledge. ISBN 9781315645612.
  62. ^ Tannen, Deborah (2003). I only say this because I love you. London: Virago. ISBN 9781860499814.
  63. ^ Eckert, Penelope; McConnell-Ginet, Sally (1992). "Think Practically and Look Locally: Language and Gender as Community- Based Practice". Annual Review of Anthropology. 21: 461–490. doi:10.1146/annurev.an.21.100192.002333. ISSN 0084-6570. JSTOR 2155996.
  64. ^ Bourdieu, Pierre (1977-12-01). "The economics of linguistic exchanges". Information (International Social Science Council). 16 (6): 645–668. doi:10.1177/053901847701600601. S2CID 144528140.
  65. ^ Woolard, Kathryn A. (1985). "Language Variation and Cultural Hegemony: Toward an Integration of Sociolinguistic and Social Theory". American Ethnologist. 12 (4): 738–748. doi:10.1525/ae.1985.12.4.02a00090. ISSN 0094-0496. JSTOR 644180. S2CID 143547128.
  66. ^ Trudgill, Peter (1972). "Sex, Covert Prestige and Linguistic Change in the Urban British English of Norwich". Language in Society. 1 (2): 179–195. doi:10.1017/S0047404500000488. ISSN 0047-4045. JSTOR 4166683.
  67. ^ "Facts and figures: Women's leadership and political participation". UN Women – Headquarters. Retrieved 2022-10-04.
  68. ^ a b Grebelsky-Lichtman, Tsfira; Bdolach, Liron (2017-07-03). "Talk like a man, walk like a woman: an advanced political communication framework for female politicians". The Journal of Legislative Studies. 23 (3): 275–300. doi:10.1080/13572334.2017.1358979. ISSN 1357-2334. S2CID 149194641.
  69. ^ a b c Hargrave, Lotte; Langengen, Tone (December 2021). "The Gendered Debate: Do Men and Women Communicate Differently in the House of Commons?". Politics & Gender. 17 (4): 580–606. doi:10.1017/S1743923X20000100. ISSN 1743-923X. S2CID 225495417.
  70. ^ a b c d Mulac, Anthony; Bradac, James J.; Karol Mann, Susan (June 1985). "Male/female language differences and attributional consequences in children's television". Human Communication Research. 11 (4): 481–506. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2958.1985.tb00057.x.
  71. ^ a b c d e Aubrey, Jennifer Stevens; Harrison, Kristen (2004). "The gender-role content of children's favorite television programs and its links to their gender-related perceptions". Media Psychology. 6 (2): 111–146. doi:10.1207/s1532785xmep0602_1. S2CID 144754474.
  72. ^ Zimman, Lal (2020-09-02), Hall, Kira; Barrett, Rusty (eds.), "Transgender Language, Transgender Moment: Toward a Trans Linguistics", The Oxford Handbook of Language and Sexuality, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190212926.013.45, ISBN 978-0-19-021292-6, retrieved 2021-06-12
  73. ^ Shelagh, Davies; Goldberg, Joshua M. (2006-09-01). "Clinical Aspects of Transgender Speech Feminization and Masculinization". International Journal of Transgenderism. 9 (3–4): 167–196. doi:10.1300/J485v09n03_08. ISSN 1553-2739. S2CID 143007221.
  74. ^ Zimman, Lal (2020-09-02), Hall, Kira; Barrett, Rusty (eds.), "Transgender Language, Transgender Moment: Toward a Trans Linguistics", The Oxford Handbook of Language and Sexuality, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190212926.013.45, ISBN 978-0-19-021292-6, retrieved 2022-06-04
  75. ^ Zimman, Lal (2021-10-06). "Beyond the cis gays' cis gaze". Gender and Language. 15 (3). doi:10.1558/genl.20883. ISSN 1747-633X. S2CID 240256058.
  76. ^ Zimman, Lal (2013-01-01). "Hegemonic masculinity and the variability of gay-sounding speech: The perceived sexuality of transgender men". Journal of Language and Sexuality. 2 (1): 1–39. doi:10.1075/jls.2.1.01zim. ISSN 2211-3770. S2CID 143437724.
  77. ^ Zimman, Lal (June 2017). "Gender as stylistic bricolage: Transmasculine voices and the relationship between fundamental frequency and /s/". Language in Society. 46 (3): 339–370. doi:10.1017/S0047404517000070. ISSN 0047-4045. S2CID 151829941.
  78. ^ Calder, Jeremy (2019). "From Sissy to Sickening: The Indexical Landscape of /s/ in SoMa, San Francisco". Journal of Linguistic Anthropology. 29 (3): 332–358. doi:10.1111/jola.12218. ISSN 1548-1395. S2CID 165109392.
  79. ^ Edelman, Elijah Adiv; Zimman, Lal (2014-05-04). "Boycunts and Bonus Holes: Trans Men's Bodies, Neoliberalism, and the Sexual Productivity of Genitals". Journal of Homosexuality. 61 (5): 673–690. doi:10.1080/00918369.2014.870438. ISSN 0091-8369. PMID 24294971. S2CID 31263792.
  80. ^ Conrod, Kirby (2020-09-02), Hall, Kira; Barrett, Rusty (eds.), "Pronouns and Gender in Language", The Oxford Handbook of Language and Sexuality, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190212926.013.63, ISBN 978-0-19-021292-6, retrieved 2021-06-12
  81. ^ Konnelly, Lex; Cowper, Elizabeth (2020-04-29). "Gender diversity and morphosyntax: An account of singular they". Glossa: A Journal of General Linguistics. 5 (1): 40. doi:10.5334/gjgl.1000. ISSN 2397-1835.
  82. ^ Corwin, Anna I. (2017-06-20). "Emerging genders: semiotic agency and the performance of gender among genderqueer individuals". Gender and Language. 11 (2): 255–277–255–277. doi:10.1558/genl.27552. ISSN 1747-633X.
  83. ^ Zimman, Lal (2013-02-18). "Hegemonic masculinity and the variability of gay-sounding speech". Journal of Language and Sexuality. 2 (1): 1–39. doi:10.1075/jls.2.1.01zim. ISSN 2211-3770. S2CID 143437724.
  84. ^ Konnelly, Lex (2021-02-15). "Nuance and normativity in trans linguistic research". Journal of Language and Sexuality. 10 (1): 71–82. doi:10.1075/jls.00016.kon. ISSN 2211-3770. S2CID 233949801.
  85. ^ Kendon, Adam (1988). Sign Languages of Aboriginal Australia: Cultural, Semiotic and Communicative Perspectives. Cambridge University Press. pp. 90–93. ISBN 0521360080.
  86. ^ Whittaker, Gordon (2002). "Linguistic anthropology and the study of Emesal as (a) women's language". In Parpola, Simo; Whiting, Robert M. (eds.). Sex and gender in the ancient Near East: proceedings of the 47th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Helsinki, July 2–6, 2001. Helsinki: Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project. pp. 633–644. ISBN 9789514590542.
  87. ^ Halder, Shashwati (2012). "Prakrit". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Shashwati (eds.). Banglapedia: national encyclopedia of Bangladesh (2nd ed.). Dhaka: Asiatic Society of Bangladesh. ISBN 9789845120364.
  88. ^ Kirton, Jean F. (1988). "Yanyuwa, a dying language". In Ray, Michael J. (ed.). Aboriginal language use in the Northern Territory: 5 reports: Work Papers of the Summer Institute of Linguistics. Darwin: Summer Institute of Linguistics. pp. 1–18.
  89. ^ Trechter, Sarah (1999). "Contextualizing the exotic few: gender dichotomies in Lakhota". In Bucholtz, Mary; Liang, A.C.; Sutton, Laurel A. (eds.). Reinventing identities: the gendered self in discourse. New York London: Oxford University Press. pp. 101–122. ISBN 978-0195126297.

Further reading