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The Language of Gender-Based Separatism: A Comparative Analysis

The Language of Gender-Based Separatism: A Comparative Analysis
The Language of Gender-Based Separatism: A Comparative Analysis
This Element shows how two social movements, lesbian separatism and Men Going Their Own Way (MGTOW), reflect the changing and complex (anti-)feminist ideologies of their time. The authors outline the historical and political background of those discourses and how they are influencing contemporary gender relations. The materials analysed comprise ten manifestos, which are examined with a combination of data-led discourse analysis and theory-led argumentation analysis. The manifestos are similar in that both sets of authors construct homogenous in-groups and out-groups as well as dichotomies between them. There are some differences though in how this is linguistically realised and who is classified as an out-group. Both groups cast social actors in particular roles and establish ethical norms, but strategic planning and utopias are more prominent among lesbian separatists. Freedom, advantage and authority are central in each group's argumentation, but lesbian separatists also stress humanitarianism while MGTOW focus on financial matters.
Cambridge University Press
Koller, Veronika
559ef6a3-5671-42c4-b483-c3be8660715e
Krendel, Alexandra
a6eeb11a-73e2-451e-b004-118abc45484c
Aiston, Jessica
212c9ef9-62ff-4324-a871-73eaf7d8e550
Koller, Veronika
559ef6a3-5671-42c4-b483-c3be8660715e
Krendel, Alexandra
a6eeb11a-73e2-451e-b004-118abc45484c
Aiston, Jessica
212c9ef9-62ff-4324-a871-73eaf7d8e550

Koller, Veronika, Krendel, Alexandra and Aiston, Jessica (2023) The Language of Gender-Based Separatism: A Comparative Analysis , Cambridge University Press, 75pp.

Record type: Book

Abstract

This Element shows how two social movements, lesbian separatism and Men Going Their Own Way (MGTOW), reflect the changing and complex (anti-)feminist ideologies of their time. The authors outline the historical and political background of those discourses and how they are influencing contemporary gender relations. The materials analysed comprise ten manifestos, which are examined with a combination of data-led discourse analysis and theory-led argumentation analysis. The manifestos are similar in that both sets of authors construct homogenous in-groups and out-groups as well as dichotomies between them. There are some differences though in how this is linguistically realised and who is classified as an out-group. Both groups cast social actors in particular roles and establish ethical norms, but strategic planning and utopias are more prominent among lesbian separatists. Freedom, advantage and authority are central in each group's argumentation, but lesbian separatists also stress humanitarianism while MGTOW focus on financial matters.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 10 July 2023
Published date: 3 August 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488676
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488676
PURE UUID: 2624f3ed-3508-4353-9472-00440b47fe57
ORCID for Alexandra Krendel: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3935-9865

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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2024 16:37
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Veronika Koller
Author: Alexandra Krendel ORCID iD
Author: Jessica Aiston

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