“But her language skills shifted the family dynamics dramatically.”

Language, gender and the construction of publics in two British newspapers.

Authors

  • Sally Johnson University of Leeds
  • Astrid Ensslin Bangor University, Wales

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/genl.v1i2.229

Keywords:

Language, gender, representation, language ideologies, publics, identity, newspapers, corpus linguistics

Abstract

Drawing on recent work on language ideologies as ‘sets of representations’ and ‘belief systems’ that are central not only to the construction of languages, but also their communities of users or publics, this paper explores the ways in which language is represented in relation to gender in two British newspapers, The Times and The Guardian. Based on the quantitative and qualitative analysis of a corpus of texts containing 96 instances of the terms or , the study reveals a marked gender distinction in the way in which language is represented in this sector of the print media in relation to four main themes: ‘aesthetic value’, ‘plain talking’, ‘transgression of norms’ and ‘language skills’. The findings are then explored in the context of ongoing theoretical debates on the question of ‘representation’ versus ‘reality’ together with the language ideological notion of gendered ‘publics’.

Author Biographies

  • Sally Johnson, University of Leeds

    Department of Linguistics and Phonetics School of Modern Languages and Cultures University of Leeds Leeds LS2 9JT

  • Astrid Ensslin, Bangor University, Wales

    National Institute for Excellence in the Creative Industries Bangor University College Road Bangor, Gwynned LL57 2DG UK

Published

2007-10-23

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Johnson, S., & Ensslin, A. (2007). “But her language skills shifted the family dynamics dramatically.”: Language, gender and the construction of publics in two British newspapers. Gender and Language, 1(2), 229-254. https://doi.org/10.1558/genl.v1i2.229