簡易檢索 / 詳目顯示

研究生: 陳宇卿
Chen, Yu-Ching
論文名稱: 解析同性戀:台灣網路新聞中的詞彙搭配與社會態度
Analyzing Homosexuality: Lexical collocations and social attitudes in Taiwan’s Internet News
指導教授: 蘇席瑤
Su, Hsi-Yao
學位類別: 碩士
Master
系所名稱: 英語學系
Department of English
論文出版年: 2018
畢業學年度: 106
語文別: 英文
論文頁數: 143
中文關鍵詞: 網路新聞詞彙搭配同性戀同志社會態度語意範疇
英文關鍵詞: Internet news, lexical collocations, homosexuality, tongzhi, social attitudes, semantic categories
DOI URL: http://doi.org/10.6345/THE.NTNU.DE.007.2018.A07
論文種類: 學術論文
相關次數: 點閱:250下載:44
分享至:
查詢本校圖書館目錄 查詢臺灣博碩士論文知識加值系統 勘誤回報
  • 摘要
    隨著同志議題越來越受到重視,人們對同志文化(Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender) 的社會態度近年來也有改變的趨勢。本研究以社會語言學角度探討同志的表徵。本研究討論在台灣網路新聞媒體中三個關鍵詞彙: 同志、同性戀、同婚,如何在網路新聞中被討論與呈現,並以三個層面來分析:詞彙搭配、新聞標題、新聞內文。研究方法使用數位典藏國家型科技計畫的斷詞工具和自建語料庫軟體 (AntConc tool) 取得中文斷詞結果(Segmentation) 與關鍵詞上下文語境 (Concordance)。 研究結果顯示顯著的語義特徵。同志、同婚、同性戀的詞彙搭配有三個語意範疇的共通性: 法律涵義與政治運動(Legal Implication and Political Movement)、立場顯示 (Stance Showing)、關係與身份標籤 (Relationship and Identity Label)。同志與同性戀的詞彙搭配語意範疇極為相似包含: 破壞性行為(Destructive Behavior)、以及負面情緒 (Negative Emotion)。所收集的網路新聞語料中可發現三個重要主題: 平等與平權(Equality and Sameness)、家庭角色 (The Role of Family)、社會破壞力 (Destruction to Society)。整體而言,負面涵義詞彙與正面涵義詞彙皆在語料中出現,但負面涵義比正面涵義的詞彙表現顯著。本研究的試圖探討同志在新聞網路媒體中的描繪與語意功能上的表徵。藉由分析新聞內文中語言的使用、社會態度和語境結構,確實幫助我們了解大眾對於同志的感知、意義與評價。
    關鍵詞: 網路新聞、同性戀、詞彙搭配、語意範疇、社會態度、同志

    ABSTRACT
    As concerns about homosexuality are becoming more prominent, social attitudes toward lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people (LGBT) have changed lately. This study attempts to investigate the representation of homosexuality from a linguistic perspective. We examine three key terms tongzhi ‘homosexual’, tongxianlian ’gay’ and tonghun ’same-sex marriage’ from news reports in Taiwan’s Internet news by studying how homosexuality is represented and described in terms of lexical collocations, headlines and news content. Making use of the tools National Digital Archives Program and AntConc (3.4.4w), we are able to retrieve word segmentation and concordance. Our collocates analysis suggests significant semantic features. The result shows that word nighboring tongzhi, tongxinglian and tonghun share three semantic categories: (i) legal implication and political movement; (ii) stance showing; (iii) relationship and identity label. Collocates of tongzhi and tongxinglian are more similar so the semantic categories overlap with each other heavily, pertaining to destructive behavior and negative emotion. We identify three major themes in homosexuality related discourses, including equality and sameness, the role of family and destruction to society. Overall, our investigation shows that positive and negative attitudes both play a role in online news; they either promote tolerance and equality or are against homosexuality. However, the result shows negative references are more prevalent than positive ones. The current study carries important implications for the linguistic representation of homosexuality, and analyzing discourses help to explore the intimate association between public perception toward homosexuality and meanings and values through language use.

    Keywords: homosexuality, Internet news, lexical collocations, semantic categories, social attitudes, tongzhi

    TABLE OF CONTENTS CHINESE ABSTRACT…………I ENGLISH ABSTRACT…………II ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS…………IV TABLE OF CONTENTS………V LIST OF TABLES…………VII LIST OF FIGURES………VIII CHAPTER ONE INTRODUCTION ………1 1.1 Motivation……….1 1.2 News discourse………5 1.3 Research questions and organization of present study……8 CHAPTER TWO LITERATURE REVIEW……11 2.1 Language, gender, and sexuality…….11 2.1.1 Sex and gender…..12 2.1.2 Theoretical models: dominance, difference and performance………..18 2.1.3 Language, gander and sexuality studies……23 2.1.4 Language and sexuality studies……26 2. 2 Language ideologies in the media discourse……31 2.2.1 Language as ideologies……32 2.2.2 Gender identity and the mass media…33 2.2.3 Gender and Language use in the media…34 2.2.4 Critical Discourse Analysis……38 2.2.5 Summary….39 2.3 Gender and Language and corpus approaches……40 2.3.1 Johnson and Ensslin (2007)………41 2.3.2 Charteris-Black and Seale (2009)……41 2.3.3 Holmgreene (2009)……42 2.3.4 Baker (2010)………43 2.3.5 King (2011)………43 2.3.6 Summary………44 CHAPTER THREE METHODOLOGY……46 3.1 Keywords selection and definitions……46 3.2 Data collection…53 3.3 Data analysis……61 3.4 Summary…71 CHAPTER FOUR RESULTS AND DISCUSSION………73 4.1 General distribution of collocates……73 4.1.1The collocates of tongzhi……74 4.1.2The collocates of tongxinglian……76 4.1.3 The collocates of tonghun……77 4.2 Assessment of collocations……78 4.2.1 Negative assessment……80 4.2.2 Positive assessment……87 4.2.3 Neutral statement……91 4.2.4 Discussion……98 4.3 Textual analysis……102 4.3.1 Headlines……102 4.3.2 News content analysis………106 4.3.2.1 Equality and sameness………106 4.3.2.2 The role of family……115 4.3.2.3 Destruction to society……122 CHAPTER FIVE CONCLUSION……127 5.1 Summary of key findings……127 5.2 Implications and limitations……………131 REFERENCES………134 APPENDIX…………142

    REFERENCES
    Androutsopoulos, J. (2010) Ideologising ethnolectal German. In: Sally J. & Tommaso M. Milani (eds.) Language Ideologies and Media Discourse. London: Continuum
    Attenborough, F. T. & Stokoe, E. 2012. Student life; student identity; student experience: Ethnomethodological methods for pedagogical matters. Psychology, Learning & Teaching.
    Ahearn, L. M. (2001). Invitations to Love: literacy, love letters and social change in Nepal. Ann Arbor Michigan: The University of Michigan Press.
    Baker, P. 2008 Sexed Texts: Language, Gender and Sexuality. London: Exquinox
    Baker, P. 2010. Sociolinguistics and Corpus Linguistics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Barrett, R. 1994. “She is not white woman”: The appropriation of white women's language by African American drag queens”. In Cultural performances: Proceedings of the Third Berkeley Women and Language Conference, Edited by: Bucholtz, M., Liang, A. C., Sutton, L. A. and Hines, C. 1–14. Berkeley, CA: Berkeley Women and Language Group.
    Bervall, V. L. 1999. Toward a Comprehensive Theory of Language and Gender. Language in Society 28.
    Blackledge, A. 2009. Lost in translation? Racializtion of a debate about language in a BBC news item. Sally Johnson and Tommaso M. Milani (eds.), Language Ideologies and Media Discourse: Texts, Practices, Politics, 143-161. London: Continuum.
    Blommaert, J. (ed) 1999. Language Ideological Debates. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter
    Blommaert, J. 2005. Discourse: A Critical Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Bucholtz, M and Hall, K. 2004. Theorizing identity in language and sexuality research. Language in Society33: 469-515.
    Bulter, J. 1990. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New York: Routledge.
    Caldas-Coulthard, C. R. and Coulthard, M. 1996. Texts and Practices: Readings in Critical Discourse. London: Routledge.
    Cameron, D. 1995. Verbal Hygiene. London: Routledge
    Cameron, D. 1997. “Performing gender identity: Young men’s talk and the construction of heterosexual masculinity” in S. Johnson and U. Meinhof (eds): Language and Masculinity. Oxford: Blackwell
    Cameron, D. 1998. The Feminist Critique of Language. London: Routledge
    Cameron, D. and Kulick, D. 2003. Language and Sexuality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Cameron, D. 2005. “Language, Gender and Sexuality: Current Issues and New Directions.” Applied Linguistics.26(4).
    Cameron, D. 2006. “Unanswered Questions and Unquestioned Assumptions in the Study of Language and Gender: Female Verbal Superiority.” Gender and Language, 1(1)
    Cameron, D. 2007. A Liberal Conservative Consensus to Restore Trust in Politics. Speech, Bath, 22 March.
    Cameron, D. 2008. Gender and Language Ideologies. In J. Holmes and M. Meyerhof (eds.), The Handbook of Language and Gender. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 447–67
    Charteris-Black, J. and Seale, C. (2010) Gender and the language of illness. Palgrave Macmillan.
    Chojnicka, J. 2015. Contesting Hegemonic Gender and Sexuality Discourses on the Web: Latvian and Polish Discourses of Gender Dissidents. CADDA journal. 7(2), 222-242
    Chou, W. S. 2000. Tongzhi: Politics of same-sex eroticism in Chinese societies. New York: Harrington Park. Corpus Linguistics 9/1: 131–56
    Cotates, J. 1996. Women Talk: Conversation between Women Friends. Oxford: Blackwell
    Coupland, N. 2007. Style. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Davies, B. L. 2009. Metadiscourses of race in the news: the Celebrity Big Brother row. Sally Johnson and Tommaso M. Milani (eds.), Language Ideologies and Media Discourse: Texts, Practices, Politics, 162-181. London: Continuum.
    De Beauvoir, S. 1952 The second sex. New York:Vintage Books
    del-Teso-Craviotto, M. 2008. Gender and sexual identity authentication in language use: The case of chat rooms. Discourse Studies 10:251-270
    Eckert, P. and McConnell-Gent, S, 2003. Language and Gender. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
    Edward, D. 2005. Moaning, whinging and laughing: the subjective side of complaints. Discourse Studies 7(1): 5-29.
    Fairclough, N.1992. Discourse and social change. Cambridge, UK: PolityPress.
    Fairclough, N. 1995. Critical discourse analysis: The critical study of language. London: Longman.
    Fairclough, N., & Wodak, R. 1997. Critical discourse analysis. In T. A. van Dijk (Ed.). Discourse as social interaction. London: Sage.
    Fairclough, N. 1999. Global capitalism and critical awareness of language. Language Awareness 8:71 –83.
    Fang, H, & Heng, J. H. 1983. Social changes and changing address norms in China. Language in Society 12:497-507
    Fausto-Sterling, A. 2000. Sexing the body: gender politics and the construction of sexuality: New York, Basic Books
    Firth, J. R. 1957. A synopsis of linguistic theory 1930-1955. Studies in Linguistic Analysis, Special Volume, Philological Society, 1-32
    Fishman, P. 1980. Coversational Insecurity. In H. Gilies, W. P. Robinson and P. Smith. Langage: Social Psychological Perspectives. Oxford: Pergamon Press
    Fowler, R. 1991. Language in the news: Discourse and ideology in the press. London: Routledge.
    Gal. S. 1997. “Feminism and Civil Society“, in FEISCHMIDT M., MAGYARI-VINCZE E. & ZENTAI V. (eds.), Women and Men in East European Transition,Cluj-Napoca, Editura Fundatiei Pentru Studii Europene, pp. 89-99.
    Gaudio, R. 2009. Allah Made Us: Sexual Outlaws in an Islamic African City, Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell
    Gauntlett, D. 2002. Media, Gender and Identity: An Introduction. London: Routledge
    Giddens, A. 1990. The Consequences of modernity: Polity Press.
    Hall, K. 2002. ‘Unnatural’ gender in Hindi. In Gender Across Languages. The Linguistic Representation of Women and Men, Vol.II, , Marlis Hellinger & Hadumond Bubmann (eds), 133-162. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
    Harris, A. 2006. Revisiting anaphoric islands. Language 82 (1): 114-130
    Holmes, J. 1995. Women, Men, and Politeness. London: Longman
    Holmes, J. 2003. Power and Politeness in the Workplace. London: Longman
    Hooghe, M., and C. Meeusen. 2013. “Is Same-Sex Marriage Legislation Related to Attitudes Toward Homosexuality?” Sexuality Research and Social Policy 10: 258-68
    Hunston, S. 2002. Corpora in applied linguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
    Inoue M. 2006. Vicarious language: Gender and linguistic modernity in Japan. Berkeley: University of California Press.
    Johnson. S., and Ensslin, A. 2007. Language in the media: Representations, identities, Ideologies. London: Continuum
    King, B. 2011. Language, sexuality and place: The view from cyberspace. Gender and Language, 5(1), 1-30
    Kroskrity, Paul V. 1999. Identity. Journal of linguistic anthropology 9(1-2).111- 114.
    Kuipers, J. 1998. Language, Identity, and Marginality in Indonesia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Kulick, D. 1992. Language shift and cultural reproduction: socialization, self and syncretism in a Papua Nut Guinean village. New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Lakoff, R. 1975. Language and Woman ’s Place. New York: Harper and Row.
    Lazar, M. 2005. Feminist Critical Discourse Analysis: Studies in Gender, Power and Ideology. London: Palgrave. Macmillan.
    Levy, A. 2005. Female Chauvinist Pigs: Women and the Rise of Raunch Culture. London: Simon and Schuster
    Lindquist, K. A., Barrett, L. F., Bliss-Moreau, E., & Russell, J. A. 2006. Language and the perception of emotion. Emotion, 6(1), 125-138.
    Lippi-Green, R. 1997. English with an accent: Language, ideology, and discrimination in the United States. London: Routledge.
    Litosseliti, L. 2006. Gender and Language: Theory and Practice. London: Arnold.
    Maltz, D. N., & Borker, R. A. 1983. A cultural approach to male female miscommunication. In John A. Gumperz (Ed.), Language and social identity, 195-216. New York: Cambridge UniversityPress.
    Mautner, G. 2007. Mining Large Corpora for Social Information: The Case of Elderly. ,Lan guage in Society 36(1): 51–72.
    McElhinny, B. 1993. We all wear the blue: Language, gender and police work. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, Stanford University, Department of Linguistics.
    McEnery, T. 2006 Swearing in English: Bad Language, Purity and Power from 1586 to the Present. London. Routledge
    McEnery. T. and Hardie, A. 2012. Corpus Linguistics: Method, Theory and Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Mills, S. 2003b. Gender and Politeness. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
    Misra, G, 2009. “Discriminalising Homexuality in India.” Reproductive Health Matters 17(34):20-28
    Myers. G. 1998. Ad Worlds: Brands, Media, Audiences. London: Arnold.
    Nicholson, L. 1994. “Interpreting Gender.” Signs, 20(1) A simplest systematics for the organization of turn taking for conversation. Language 50(4), 696-735
    Paffey, D. 2010. Globalising standard Spanish: the promotion of 'panhispanism' in the Spanish press. In S. Johnson, & T. M. Milani (Eds.), Language Ideologies and Media Discourse: Texts, Practices, Politics. (Advances in Sociolinguistics). London, GB: Continuum.
    Paffey, D. 2012. Globalising standard Spanish: the promotion of 'panhispanism' in the Spanish press In, Johnson, Sally and Milani, Tommaso M. (eds.) Language Ideologies and Media Discourse: Texts, Practices, Politics, 41-60. London : Continuum .
    Park, S, J. 2010. Language games on Korean television: between globalization, nationalism, and authority. Sally Johnson and Tommaso M. Milani (eds.), Language Ideologies and Media Discourse: Texts, Practices, Politics, 61-78. London: Continuum.
    Partington, A. 2004. ‘ ‘‘Utterly content in each other’s company’’: Semantic prosody and semantic preference,’ International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 9/1: 131–56
    Pipher, M.1994. Reviving Ophelia: Saving the selves of adolescent girls. New York: Ballantine
    Phillips, L and M. Jorgensen. 2002. Discourse analysis as theory and method.London: SAGE.
    Richard, J. E. 2007. Analysing Newspapers: An Approach from Critical Discourse Analysis. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
    Romaine, S. 2001. A Corpus-based view of gender in British and America English. In Hellinger. M, and Bussmann. H (eds) Gender across Languages: The De/construction of Gender Roles through Language Variation and Change 153-176. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
    Sacks, H., Schegloff, E. A. and Jefferson, G. 1974. A simplest systematics for the organization of turn taking for conversation. Language 50(4)
    Sang, Tze-Lan Deborah. 1999. Lesbian Acitivism in the Mediated Public Sphere of Taiwan. In Spaces of Their Own: Women’s Public Sphere in Transnational China. Mayfair M. Yang, ed. Pp. 132-161. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press
    Sedgwick, E. 1995. “Gosh, Boy George, You Must be Awfully Secure in your Masculinity”, in M. Berger , B. Wallis and S. Watson (eds) Constructing Masculinity, pp. 11-20. New York and London: Routledge.
    Shapiro, J. 1981. “Anthropology and the study of Gender.” Soudings: An Interdisciplinary Journal
    Sinclair, J. 1991. Corpus, Concordance, Collocation. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Sperling, Susan. 1991. “Baboons with Briefcases vs. Langurs in Lipstick: Feminism and Functionalism in Primate Studies” In Micaela di Leonardo (ed.), Gender at the Crossroads of Knowledge: Feminist Anthropology in the Postmodern Era. University of California Press.
    Spender, D. 1980. Man Made Language. London: Routledge& Kegan Paul.
    Spiros M. and Jurgen S. 2010. Prescriptivism in and about the media: a comparative analysis in Greece and Germany. In Sally Johnson and Tommaso M.Milani (ed.), Language Ideologies and Media Discourse: Texts, Practices, Politics, 17-40. London: Cotinuum Press.
    Stubbs, M. 1995. Collocations and semantic profiles: On the cause of trouble with quantitative. Functions of language 2(1): 23-55
    Stubbs, M. 2001. Words and Phrases. Oxford: Blackwell.
    Talbot, M. 1995. A Synthetic sisterhood : false friends in a teenage magazine in Hall. K. and Bucholtz, M (eds) Gender Articulated: language and the socially constructed self, New York: Routledge.
    Tannen, D. 1991. You Just Don’t Understand. Women and Men in Conversation. New York : William Morrow
    Tannen, D. 1995. Talking from 9 to 5. London: Virago.
    Tannen, D. 1998. The Argument Culture. London: Virago.
    Tetty, J. 2016. Homosexuality, Moral Panic, and Politicized Homophobia in Ghana: Interrogating Discourses of Moral Entrepreneurship in Ghanaian Media. Communication, Culture & Critique 9(1)
    Trammell, J. Y. 2015. “Homosexuality is bad for me”: An analysis of homosexual Christian testimonies in Cchristianity today magazine. Journal of Media and Religion, 14(1)
    Traver, S, D. 2010. The Postfeminist User: Feminism and Media Theory in Two Interactive Media Properties. Feminist Media Studies 10 (4): 457-475.
    Tromel-Plotz, S. 1991. Selling the apolitical. Discourse &Society 2 (4):489-502
    Uchida, A. 1992. When ‘difference’ is ‘dominance’: A critique of the ‘anti-power-based’ cultural approach to sex differences. Language in Society 21(4): 547-568
    Van Dijk, T. A. 1993a. Elite Discourse and Racism. London: SAGE
    Van Dijk, T. A. 1993b. Principles of Critical Discourse Analysis. Discourse&Society 4(2): 249-83
    Van Dijk, T. A. 1988. News analysis: Case studies of international and national news in the press. Hillsadale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
    Van Dijk, T. A. 1998. Idology. London: SAGE
    Van Dijk, T. 2001. Critical discourse analysis. In D. Schiffrin, D. Tannen, &H. E. Hamilton (Eds.), The handbook of discourse analysis. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
    Van Dijk, T. A. 2005. Racism and Discourse in Spain and Latin America. Amsterdam: John Bejamins Publishing
    Weidman, A. J. 2006. Singing the Classical, Voicing the Modern. The postcolonial politics of Music in South India. London: Duke University Press.
    Woolard, Kathryn A. 1998 Introduction: Language ideology as a field of inquiry. In B.B. Schieffelin, K.A. Woolard, and P.V. Kroskrity (eds.), Language Ideologies: Practice and Theory. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, pp. 3-47
    West, Candace and Zimmerman, D. 1987. Doing gender. Gender and Society, 1:125–151
    Wong, A. D., and Zhang, Q. 2000. The linguistic construction of the tongzhi community. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, 10(2), 248-278
    Wong, A. D. 2005. The reappropriation of tongzhi. Language in Society. 34(5)
    Wong, A. D. 2008. "The Trouble with Tongzhi: The Politics of Labeling among Gay and Lesbian Hongkongers." Pragmatics 18(2).
    Yang, J. 2007. “‘Re-employment Stars’: Language, Gender and Neoliberal Restructuring in China.” In Words, Worlds and Material Girls: Language, Gender and Global Economies, ed. Bonnie McElhinny, 72–103. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
    Zhou, H. 1995. 同志論(On Tongzhi). Hong Kong: Hong Kong Tongzhi Research Society.

    下載圖示
    QR CODE