Article published In: Critical perspectives on gender, politics and violence
Edited by Eleonora Esposito
[Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 9:1] 2021
► pp. 100–126
Incongruous and illegitimate
Antisemitic and Islamophobic semiotic violence against women in politics in the United Kingdom
Published online: 4 March 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/jlac.00055.kup
https://doi.org/10.1075/jlac.00055.kup
Abstract
Violence against women in politics encompasses physical, psychological, economic, sexual and semiotic forms of
violence, targeting women because their gender is seen as threatening to hegemonic political norms. Theoretical debates over these
categories and empirical applications to global cases often overlook that backgrounds and lived experiences of women in politics
can differ considerably. Using the United Kingdom as a case study, in this article I analyze different manifestations of online
semiotic violence – violence perpetrated through words and images seeking to render women incompetent and invisible (. 2020. Violence against Women in Politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. , 187) – against female, religious-minority politicians. Through a qualitative
discursive approach, I identify patterns and strategies of violence in an original dataset of Twitter posts that mention the
usernames of seven prominent Muslim and Jewish female politicians. Results show that multiply-marginalized politicians are exposed
to both sexist and racist rhetoric online. In this case, semiotic violence functions to render women incompetent using racist
disloyalty tropes as well as to render women invisible by invalidating their testimonies of abuse.
Article outline
- 1.Background
- 2.Semiotic violence against women in politics
- 3.Antisemitism and Islamophobia in the United Kingdom
- 4.Data and methods
- 4.1Gathering data
- 4.2Procedure of analysis
- 4.3Theoretical framework
- 4.4Limitations
- 5.Results and discussion
- 5.1Overview
- 5.2Rendering women incompetent
- 5.3Rendering women invisible
- 6.Conclusions
- Notes
References
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