Article published In: Corpus Linguistics in Language and Sexuality Studies: Developments and Prospects
Edited by Heiko Motschenbacher
[Journal of Language and Sexuality 7:2] 2018
► pp. 205–236
“I wanna be a toy”
Self-sexualisation in gender-variant Twitter users’ biographies
Published online: 27 August 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/jls.17016.web
https://doi.org/10.1075/jls.17016.web
Abstract
The paradigmatic transgender woman is often negatively oversexualised, pornographised and fetishised in mainstream
conceptualisations and discourses. However, self-sexualisation by transgender individuals is often portrayed as a (sex-)positive
social phenomenon. Little research has been conducted that analyses the self-sexualisation strategies of the multiple
instantiations of gender-variant identity, including transmasculine and non-binary social actors. This paper uses a corpus-informed
socio-cognitive approach to critical discourse studies to identify differences between the self-sexualisation strategies and
underpinning cognitive models of different gender-variant user-groups on Twitter. 2,565 users are coded into five categories: (1)
transfeminine; (2) transmasculine; (3) transsexual; (4) transvestite; (5) non-binary. Findings show that transvestite- and
transsexual-identifying users most closely fit the pornographised and fetishised conceptualisation, whilst non-binary users are the
least self-sexualising user-group.
Keywords: transgender, gender-variant, sexualisation, Twitter, socio-cognitive, corpus linguistics
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Sexualisation strategies – A brief overview
- 3.Data contextualisation and analytical framework
- 4.Analysis
- 4.1Transfeminine users
- 4.1.1Keywords
- 4.1.2Collocates
- 4.2Transmasculine users
- 4.2.1Keywords
- 4.2.2Collocates
- 4.3Transsexual users
- 4.3.1Keywords
- 4.3.2Collocates
- 4.4Transvestite users
- 4.4.1Keywords
- 4.4.2Collocates
- 4.5Non-binary users
- 4.5.1Keywords
- 4.5.2Collocates
- 4.1Transfeminine users
- 5.Discussion
- 6.Conclusion
- Notes
References
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