De/Construction of Gender Stereotypes: A Semiological Discourse Analysis of Electronic Media Food Advertisements
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17507/tpls.1506.15Keywords:
electronic media, food advertisements, gender stereotypes, gendered ideolog, visual and verbal practicesAbstract
There are various means of ideological investment, and electronic media commercials are among the best sites to invest in ideology for long-lasting effects. At present, food advertisements have become a popular genre to de/construct gendered ideologies because, most often, electronic media discourses mirror prevailing social reality in a particular context. The current research aims to decode the linguistic and semiotic content of food company advertisements. The data for the present study were collected from food advertisements of the Dalda Company from 2021 to 2022. The food advertisements of the mentioned company, which were aired during the mentioned time span, have been linguistically and semiotically analysed with respect to the concept of gender de/construction. The present study utilizes an integrated research approach that has been devised by drawing upon the research models of Kress (2006), Barthes (1974), and Kruger (2000). The rationale behind using the triangulation technique is that the data used in the study comprises three modes: linguistic, semiotic and Focus Group Discussions. The Focus Group Discussions have been conducted and analysed to validate the researcher’s findings of semiotic analysis. The study contends that the concept of patriarchal norms and observance of gender stereotypes has been brought out through the analysis of the collected data. Besides, the study highlights that electronic media advertisements are one of the important sites to de/construct existing gender stereotypes. The concept of word-picture conjunction has been deftly used to propagate desired ideology to affirm patriarchal norms.
References
Afshan, N. (2018). Breaking Gender Stereotypes: A Multimodal Analysis of Selected Pakistani Electronic Media Advertisement. (Published M.Phil. Thesis, National University of Modern Languages, Islamabad, Pakistan.).
Barthes, R. (1974). Image-Music-Text. London, England: Fontana.
Behnam, B., & Zamanian, J. (2014). Gender and the discourse of advertising in English and Persian magazine advertisements. International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences, 4(11), 1.
Butler, J. (2002). Gender trouble. Routledge.
Chandler, D. (2017). Semiotics: The basics. London, England: Taylor & Francis.
Creswell, J. W., & Clark, V. L. P. (2017). Designing and conducting mixed methods research. New York, United States: Sage publications.
Daalmans, S., Kleemans, M., & Sadza, A. (2017). Gender representation on gender-targeted television channels: A comparison of female-and male-targeted TV channels in the Netherlands. Sex roles, 77(5-6), 366-378.
Eisend, M. (2010). A meta-analysis of gender roles in advertising. Journal of the academy of marketing science, 38, 418-440.
Ellemers, N. (2018). Gender stereotypes. Annual review of psychology, 69, 275-298.
Faiers, A., Cook, M., & Neame, C. (2007). Towards a contemporary approach for understanding consumer behaviour in the context of domestic energy use. Energy Policy, 35(8), 4381-4390.
Fairclough, N. (2013). Critical discourse analysis. R. Wodak (Ed.). London, England: Sage.
Fawcett, P. (2014). Translation and language. Routledge.
Goddard, A. (2002). The language of advertising: written texts. London, England: Psychology Press.
Hanson, W. E., Creswell, J. W., Clark, V. L. P., Petska, K. S., & Creswell, J. D. (2005). Mixed methods research designs in counseling psychology. Journal of counseling psychology, 52(2), 224.
Huda, A. R., & Ali, R. A. (2015). Portrayal of women in Pakistani media. International Journal of Academic Research and Reflection, 3(1), 12-18.
Krueger, R. A., U. K. Sage, D. L. Morgan, D. W. Stewart, and P. N. Shamdasani. (2000). "Focus group discussion".
Lim, L., & Loi, K. Y. (2015). Evaluating slogan translation from the readers’ perspective: A case study of Macao. Babel, 61(2), 283-303.
Mills, S. (1995). Feminist stylistics. London, England: Routledge.
Nasir, M. H. (2017). Subscription or Subversion: Gender Representation in Pakistani Television Commercials (Doctoral dissertation, National University of Modern Languages, Islamabad.).
Nasir, M. H. (2018). A Semiotic Analysis of Gender Discursive Patterns in Pakistani Television Commercials. International Journal of English Linguistics, 8(4), 192-207.
Peirce, Charles S. (1931–1958). Collected Papers of Charles S. Peirce. 8 vols. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. [Hartshorne, Charles; Weiss, Paul (eds.), 1931–1935; vols. 7–8. Burks, A. W. (ed.) 1958; In-text references are to CP, followed by volume and paragraph numbers]
Poole, E., & Williamson, M. (2021). Disrupting or reconfiguring racist narratives about Muslims? The representation of British Muslims during the Covid crisis. Journalism, 14648849211030129.
Sajid, A. & Buzdar, H. Q. (2020). Gender Politics in Pakistani Textbooks’ Discourses: A Comparative Perspective of Sindh and Punjab ELT Textbooks. Pakistan Journal of Social Sciences (PJSS), 40(2), 833-845.
Saussure, F. D. (1994). Course in General Linguistics, tr. Baskin, New York, America: Philosophical.
Stanley, J. W., & Weare, C. (2004). The effects of Internet use on political participation: Evidence from an agency online discussion forum. Administration & Society, 36(5), 503-527.
Taflinger, R. (1996). Taking Advantage. You and me, babe: sex and advertising. Retrieved on November, 10, 2008.
Stevenson, Angus. (Ed.) (2010). Oxford dictionary of English (3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. xxii+2069pp.
Umar, M. (2012). Identity Construction of Brands on Internet: An Analysis of Pakistani Discourse of Advertising. (Published Doctoral dissertation, Fatima Jinnah Women University, Rawalpindi, Pakistan.).
Van Dijk. T. A. (1995). Discourse analysis as ideology analysis. London: Sage.
Waseem, M., López, A., Carro, P. L., & Losada, M. A. (2023). Cellular guardband NB-IoT performance over PMMA plastic optical fibers. Journal of Lightwave Technology, 41(23), 7302-7308.
White, R. (2005). Advertising. London, England: McGraw-Hill.