Who’s really normal? Language and sexuality in public space
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Abstract

Focusing on a Hong Kong online discussion involving ‘Jenny’, who was later described as the ‘Kong Girl’ prototype, we demonstrate a method to study gender stereotype as both semiotically and discursively constructed. We trace the perceivable signs in online posts as demeanor indexicals (Goffman 1956, Agha 2007), and discuss how forum participants collectively develop Jenny’s public persona as a woman who is materialistic and has an entitlement attitude, qualities that later become emblematic of the Kong Girl stereotype. Our analysis proposes a framework for how interpretive discourses mediate between the situated social media context and gender ideologies, and contributes to an understanding of the role of demeanor indexicals in the construction of a stereotype that is not associated with a linguistic register. We provide insights into local gender dynamics and illustrate how a private dispute becomes entangled in a public consensus building process that is necessarily selective, emergent, and positioned.

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/content/journals/10.1075/jls.4.2.02che
2015-01-01
2024-03-29
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http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/journals/10.1075/jls.4.2.02che
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Keyword(s): demeanor; demeanor indexical; gender ideologies; gender stereotype; indexicality; interpretive discourse

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