Article published In: Democracy and Discriminatory Strategies in Parliamentary Discourse
Edited by Karin Bischof and Cornelia Ilie
[Journal of Language and Politics 17:5] 2018
► pp. 594–616
“Behave yourself, woman!”
Patterns of gender discrimination and sexist stereotyping in parliamentary interaction
Published online: 14 August 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/jlp.18015.ili
https://doi.org/10.1075/jlp.18015.ili
Abstract
After a record number of women were elected to the House of Commons in 1997, many incidents of sexism and abusive behaviour were reported. The aim of this article is twofold: on the one hand, to scrutinize the mechanisms and effects of sexist discrimination and stereotyping of women MPs in the House of Commons; on the other, to identify the strategies used by female (and male) MPs to subvert discriminatory representations, and to counteract gender-biased and sexist treatment. The focus of the multi-level analysis is on three recurrent strategies: objectifying women MPs through fixation on personal appearance rather than professional performance (e.g. making trivialising comments about women’s hair and dressing style); patronizing women MPs through the use of derogatory forms of address (e.g. directly addressing them by the terms of endearment “honey”, “dear”, “woman”); and stigmatizing women MPs through abusive and discriminatory labelling (e.g. ascribing to them stereotypically insulting names.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Approaches to sexist and abusive language/behaviour
- 3.Exposing gender bias at the private-public interface
- 4.Discourse-shaped identity framings
- 5.Parliamentary usage of Master Suppression Techniques
- 6.Where does the British parliamentary bully tradition come from?
- 7.Manifestations of British parliamentary sexist discrimination and bullying
- 7.1Objectifying women MPs through stereotypically sexist remarks
- 7.2Patronizing women MPs through derogatory forms of address
- 7.3Stigmatizing women MPs through abusive labeling
- 8.Reactions to and actions against male MPs’ sexist and demeaning behaviour
- 8.1Informal reactions and follow-ups
- 8.2Online feedback (through Twitter, social media)
- 8.3Institutional initiatives: Constructive proposals and sanctions
- 9.Concluding remarks
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Tanaka, Lidia
2021. Japanese politicians’ questions in parliament. In Questioning and Answering Practices across Contexts and Cultures [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 323], ► pp. 71 ff.
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