FROM POLITENESS TO SELF- CONSTRUCTION - Analyzing Women’s Language in a Japanese TV Drama Across Generations
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Date
2025-06-26
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Abstract
Women’s language has long been analyzed in sociolinguistics and feminist
linguistics. Previous studies investigate how women’s language is influenced by Patriarchy and
societal gender norms, and is tightly associated with politeness. However, the studies are mainly
based on surveys and interviews, and media materials are merely employed for research and
analysis. The media is used as a means of policing women’s behavior and language, and the
gender norms are reinforced through media discourse. Thus, the media could also reflect the
changes in gender norms and be valued for analyzing how women’s language changes in
fictional narratives. This thesis discusses how women’s language is represented in the latest
Japanese TV drama and reflects women’s cognitive changes across generations. This study uses
qualitative text analysis and examines female characters’ speech in one TV drama across
generations and speech situations, focusing on sentence-final particles and intonation, revealing
that women’s language generally reflects traditional gender expectations, but also contains
elements and trends of changing these norms and appearing neutral cognitions from language
use. By exploring gendered language from fictional dramas, this study expands existing
material choices and perspectives to the analysis of women’s language and highlights that
though women’s language is associated with gender and social identity, it is also complicated
by individual cognition and self-construction.
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Japanese, Japanese women’s language, sentence-final particle, intonation, TV drama, media material, generations, text analysis