LINGUIST List 14.1530

Wed May 28 2003

Diss: Socioling: Sourour: 'Gender Differences...'

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  • hala_taw, Gender Differences in requesting speech act...

    Message 1: Gender Differences in requesting speech act...

    Date: Wed, 28 May 2003 06:21:31 +0000
    From: hala_taw <hala_tawhotmail.com>
    Subject: Gender Differences in requesting speech act...


    Institution: Ain Shams University Program: Department of English Dissertation Status: Completed Degree Date: 2002

    Author: Hala Tawfik Sourour

    Dissertation Title: Gender Differences in requesting speech act: a contrastive sociolinguistic study of standard american and the variety of the educated Cairene

    Linguistic Field: Sociolinguistics

    Subject Language: English (code: ENG )

    Dissertation Director 1: Mohamed Ramzy Radwan Dissertation Director 2: Soheir Gamal Mahfouz

    Dissertation Abstract:

    The study addresses the impact the independent variable of gender has on the levels of directness/indirectness as well as politeness in the request acts performed by Am. and Eg. Cairene native speakers. Like other speech acts, requests can be revealing as far as social arrangements and values are concerned. The study is an attempt to reveal social variation: how males and females may differ in their linguistic behavior in the same situation.

    The main instrument used to collect data is a questionnaire that successfully elicited the total number of 2461 requests, provided by four groups: Am. males, Am. females, Eg. males and Eg. females. The questionnaire items are designed according to four main variables: sex of addressee, power, social distance, and degree of imposition. Each item is a snapshot of a "Speech Event" with the main components of Ends, Setting, and Participants.

    The elicited requesting acts are analyzed on the levels of syntactic patterns, and strategy types to measure the levels of directness/ indirectness. Referential strategies, internal modifiers, and supportive moves are examined as potential indicators of politeness/impoliteness strategies. Results and findings are substantiated by tables and figures. Through inter-group comparison, similarities and differences between Am. and Eg. males and females are detected in one aspect of communicative competence: requesting.