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刊讯|SSCI 期刊《性别与语言》2022年第1-4期

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刊讯|SSCI 期刊《语言学习与发展》2022年第1-4期

2023-03-14

GENDER AND LANGUAGE

Volume 16, Issue 1-4, 2022

GENDER AND LANGUAGE(SSCI一区,2021 IF:2.268)2022年第16卷第1-4期共刊文25篇。

其中,第1期共发文6篇,其中研究性论文4篇,书评2篇;第2期共发文7篇,其中研究性论文5篇,书评2篇;第3期为特别篇,专论中欧、东欧的语言与性别话题,共发文8篇,其中研究性论文6篇,书评2篇;第4期共发文4篇,均为研究性论文篇。研究论文涉及超规范性,超语言学,女性主义,符号学,网络话语、对话分析、性别身份、男性气质等。欢迎转发扩散!(2022年已更完)

目录


ISSUE 1

ARTICLES

■ Transmedicalism and ‘trans enough’: linguistic strategies in talk about gender dysphoria, by Lex Konnelly, Pages 1–25.

■ Politics, pronouns and the players: examining how videogame players react to the inclusion of a transgender character in World of Warcraft, by Frazer Heritage, Pages 26-51.

■ Critical reflections on ethnographic data collection in the highly gendered environment of male football, by Solvejg Wolfers-Pommerenke, Pages 52-74.

■ Navigating homophobia and reinventing the self: an analysis of Nigerian digital pro-gay discourse, by Paul Ayodele Onanuga, Pages 75-97.


REVIEWS

■ De-gendering Gendered Occupations: Analysing Professional Discourse Joanne McDowell, by Shuai Liu, Pages 1–3.

■ Virtual Activism: Sexuality, the Internet, and a Social Movement in Singapore Robert Phillips, by Christian Go, Pages 1–3.


ISSUE 2

ARTICLES

■ ‘Ted Cruz cucks again’: The insult term cuck as an alt-right masculinist signifier, by Maureen Kosse, Pages  99–124.

■ (Hetero)sexist microaggressions in practice, by Rosemary Lobban, Russell Luyt, Daragh T McDermott, Pages 125–148.

■ Beyond dichotomies: A female Qatari’s negotiation of gender and professional identity, by Afra Al-Khulaif, Dorien Van De Mieroop, Pages 149-172.

■ Asian masculinity celebrated and otherised: Representations of Chinese and Korean men in Japanese written media, by Satoko Suzuki, Pages 173-194.


Language, Gender and Sexuality in Review

■ Language, gender and sexuality in 2021: hopeful futures amidst sound and fury, by Branca Falabella Fabrício, Pages 1-31.


REVIEWS

■ Love, Sex, Gender, and Superheroes Jeffery Brown (2022), by Frazer Heritages, Pages 1-3.

■ Linguistic Variation and Social Practices of Normative Masculinity Fergus O’Dwyer (2020), by Nicholas Hugman, Pages 1-3.


ISSUE 3

ARTICLES

■ Politics of resignification, by Ksenija Bogetić, Pages 195–215.

■ Gender-sensitive language use in Serbia, by Tanja Petrović, Pages 216-240.

Women as a linguistic footnote, by Roman Kuhar, Milica Antić Gaber, Pages 241-264.

■ Nonbinary Czech language, by Vít Kolek, Pages 265-285.

■ 'Rainbow plague' or 'rainbow allies'?, by Dominika Baran, Pages 286–307.

■ Discursive acts of resistance, by Małgorzata Chałupnik, Gavin Brookes, Pages 308-333.


REVIEWS

■ Gender and Political Apology: When the Patriarchal State Says ‘Sorry’ by Emma Dolan, by Weijia Shan, Dan Huang, Pages 1–3.

Linguistic Perspectives on Sexuality in Education: Representations, Constructions and Negotiations edited by Lukasz Pakula, by Birong Huang, Pages 1–4.


ISSUE 4

ARTICLES

■ Feminine accent, masculine rapper, by Tianxiao Wang, Pages 335–358.

■ ‘Balancing family time with fighting villains’, by Laura Coffey-Glover, Jai Mackenzie, Pages 359–381.

■ Cross-cultural issues in trans terminology, by Konstantinos Argyriou, Pages 382-407.

■ Humour and teasing in gay Taiwanese men’s mediatised interaction on an LGBTQ-oriented YouTube entertainment variety show, by Li-Chi Chen, Pages 408-434.


摘要

Transmedicalism and ‘trans enough’: linguistic strategies in talk about gender dysphoria

Lex Konnelly, University of Toronto

Abstract While gender dysphoria is a real and acute distress for many transgender people, it is not universal, and it is experienced and oriented to in a myriad of ways. However, its status as a prerequisite for gender-affirming care can lead trans people to feel compelled to amplify its salience in pursuit of medical support. Through a critical discourse analysis of nonbinary healthcare narratives, this article traces the relationship between linguistic practices in these care interactions and the gender and sexual logics of the transmedicalist model of trans-gender care. Individuals’ descriptions of dysphoria in the consultation room are not straightforward accounts of assimilation to transmedicalist expectations. Rather, when read from a trans linguistic perspective attentive to the biopolitics of transgender healthcare, these become strategies for nonbinary patients to enact their own interventions on a process over which (it may seem) they have minimal control, presenting a critical thirding (as described by Eve Tuck 2009) of a dichotomous view of either transnormativity or resistance.


Key words: transnormativity, nonbinary, trans linguistics, healthcare


Politics, pronouns and the players: examining how videogame players react to the inclusion of a transgender character in World of Warcraft

Frazer Heritage, Birmingham City University

Abstract Despite being released in 2004, the online videogame World of Warcraft (WoW) introduced its first transgender character only in 2020. This article examines how players responded to this new character, named Pelagos, analysing how many players were for/against the inclusion of Pelagos, how these views were constructed and how players interact with each other. Data from official WoW fora demonstrate a surprising backlash against transphobia and overwhelming support for the inclusion of a transgender character. Those who were against the inclusion of Pelagos framed their arguments in terms of objections to political correctness, arguing that gaming should remain politically neutral. By contrast, those in favour of including Pelagos argued that videogames are political by nature. Further, examination of pronouns revealed that Pelagos is very rarely misgendered. Such a positive response has implications for research into Critical Discourse Studies and for videogame companies.


Key words: transphobia, trans linguistics, transgender characters, online fora, videogame community, videogames, World of Warcraft


Critical reflections on ethnographic data collection in the highly gendered environment of male football

Solvejg Wolfers-Pommerenke, Leuphana University of Lüneburg

Abstract This article critically reflects on the methodological implications of indexing gender and sexuality by research participants when conducting ethnographic fieldwork in explicitly gendered contexts, particularly where notions of hegemonic masculinity are prevalent. Research suggests a number of potential challenges for female researchers, such as being patronised and subjected to sexist attitudes, among others. In order to gain a greater understanding of these methodological challenges, this study draws on over 60 hours of audio-recorded and observed interactions among male professional and elite football (‘soccer’ in US English) players and coaches before, during and after football matches and trainings. The main focus is the kinds of gendered and sexualised identities participants regularly assign to the female researcher in discursive interaction. This shows that, in ethnographic research projects, the construction of gender and sexual identities is potentially always relevant to data collection and research outcome.


Key words: ethnography, reflection, masculinity, sexism, sexuality, feminism, sports


Navigating homophobia and reinventing the self: an analysis of Nigerian digital pro-gay discourse

Paul Ayodele Onanuga, Technische Universität Chemnitz and Federal University Oye-Ekiti

Abstract Discriminatory practices against the Nigerian gay community take the form of state and non-state sponsored opposition, censorship and violence. This study investigates how gay Nigerians combat homophobia by using language agentively on social media as a semiotic resource towards self-assertion and identity construction. Data retrieved from Twitter via keyword searches suggest that in addition to harnessing agency through positive self-representation and ingroup affirmation, the digital discourses of Nigerian gay men recontextualise religion as a legitimising tool, transforming it into a site of affirmative struggle. These resources reach a crescendo in the practice known as ‘kito-ing’, a discourse strategy that protects the gay community from threats by publicly ‘outing’ homophobic actors, thus contesting the prevailing gender hierarchy. While Nigerian physical space restricts queer livability, the digital space becomes a locus for agency whereby various semiotic resources are used to refuse the status quo and assert nonnormative sexualities against an otherwise oppressive social order.


Key words: Homosexuality, Twitter, Kito-ing, Semiotics, agency, homophobia, language, Nigeria


‘Ted Cruz cucks again’: The insult term cuck as an alt-right masculinist signifier

Maureen Kosse, University of Colorado Boulder

Abstract This article provides a multimodal semiotic analysis of the word cuck as used in online white supremacist spaces. A fundamental belief of the white supremacist ‘alt-right’ movement is an anti-Semitic narrative that positions Jewish people as a ‘global elite’ that seeks to oppress and eliminate white populations. Central to this belief is that Jewish people actively manipulate populations of colour, Black people in particular, to overtake white populations in a process known as ‘white genocide’ or ‘the great replacement’. Based on a digital ethnography of alt-right communities on Voat, Twitter and Reddit, this article demonstrates how the memeified word ‘cuck’, a pejorative term for ‘weak’ men on the US political right wing, draws from and reproduces this white nationalist conspiracy theory through allusions to interracial cuckold pornography. While disguised as innocuous, expressions like ‘cuck’ provide insight into how the alt-right weaponises misogynist and racist humour in its radicalisation efforts.


Key words: cuckold, pornography, alt-right, racist humor, anti-Semitism, digital ethnography, online discourse


(Hetero)sexist microaggressions in practice

Rosemary Lobban, University of Greenwich

Russell Luyt, University of Greenwich

Daragh T McDermott, Nottingham Trent University

Abstract Verbal microaggressions perpetuate inequalities and negatively impact wellbeing. Yet, there is little work on microaggressions in situ. We address this gap, connecting microaggressions research with scholarship concerning prejudice and discrimination in situated interaction, and focusing on (hetero)sexist microaggressions. Conversation analysis (CA) and membership categorisation analysis (MCA) are applied to excerpts of naturally-occurring and focus group conversation to determine what (hetero)sexist microaggressions look like in practice; how they affect conversations; and whether they map onto well-documented CA/MCA phenomena. Findings suggest that when people produce microaggressive utterances, they use various devices (e.g. pre-sequences, idioms, humour) to mitigate accountability. Furthermore, concerning recipients’ reactions, the treatment of an utterance as microaggressive can involve hallmarks of dispreferred turns including hesitation and/or indirect challenges involving deletion/repair initiation. We therefore propose that such features are criteria for an utterance/sequence to be considered microaggressive. Moreover, such strategies suggest that speakers/recipients are agentic in the (re)production of (hetero)sexism, and therefore may be agentic in effecting change.


Key words: Microaggressions, Membership Categorisation Analysis, (Hetero)sexism, conversation analysis


Beyond dichotomies: A female Qatari’s negotiation of gender and professional identity

Afra Al-Khulaif, Qatar University

Dorien Van De Mieroop, KU Leuven

Abstract Most research on gender in the Middle Eastern workplace treats gender identities in relation to the polarity of ‘tradition’ and ‘modernity’. Although some of these studies take a critical perspective, they largely ignore the importance of language, and therefore empirical work on this topic from a social constructionist perspective is largely lacking. This article presents the narratives related by a female Qatari professional during a research interview and the discursive positions she takes up vis-à-vis these ‘tradition-or-modernity’- oriented dominant discourses of gender-based difference. A qualitative, micro-oriented discourse analytical method highlights how ‘gender identity’ is made relevant in the negotiation of ‘professional identity’ and how culturally-governed expectations about femininity and professionalism surface – and are interactionally dealt with. The interviewee constructs a highly ephemeral identity at the intersection of gender and professional identity, presenting a much less polarised view on gender identity. This challenges essentialist notions of the gender-related tradition-modernity dichotomy found in the literature.


Key words: Middle Eastern workplace, gender identity, professional identity, intersectional identity, narrative analysis, research interview


Asian masculinity celebrated and otherised: Representations of Chinese and Korean men in Japanese written media

Satoko Suzuki, Macalester College

Abstract Japanese writers portray Chinese and Korean men as physically masculine, which often involves heightened sexuality, in two ways. First, some female writers discuss Japanese women’s heterosexual desire for Chinese and Korean men by emphasising these men’s physicality and desirable masculinity. Second, Japanese novelists often assign hypermasculine language to Chinese and Korean male characters. By celebrating Chinese and Korean masculinity, such depictions offer a counternarrative to derogatory stereotypes that have circulated and continue to circulate in rightwing (often male) nationalistic discourses. At the same time, however, the language these writers employ otherises Chinese and Korean men by hypersexualising them and placing them outside mainstream Japanese society.


Key words: Asian masculinity, Chinese masculinity, Korean masculinity, sexuality, Korean Wave, media representation, Japanese written media


Language, gender and sexuality in 2021: hopeful futures amidst sound and fury

Branca Falabella Fabrício, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

Abstract This year-in-review addresses the way violence and civil unrest manifested intensely in 2021, at the two-year mark of the Covid-19 pandemic, by inspecting the local dramas various authors re-narrate through the lenses of gender, sexuality and their semiotic performances. Three focal points organise the literature recontextualised here. First is the study of the lingering effects of cisheteropatriarchy in different contexts. Second, while forging a diagnosis of the present, the texts reviewed here address ongoing practices that defy the persistent colonial gaze. Third, they propose future paths that follow the decolonial route now at the centre of language, gender and sexuality research. Overall, the works resonate with the sound of the past, the fury of the present and the hope for the future. While transitioning forward with actions set forth today, they reimagine colonial yesterdays. As such, they indicate the chronotopic mobility of power-resistance performances.


Key words: normativities, transgressions, chronotope, power, resistance, agency, alliances


Politics of resignification

Ksenija Bogetić, Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts

Abstract Societies of central and eastern Europe are increasingly described as the hub of broader ‘antigender’ mobilisations, which has made them a locus of interest in political science and gender studies, yet they curiously remain among the least represented in gender and language scholarship to date. Recent developments in the region tap into some urgent foci for the sociolinguistic study of gender and sexuality, encompassing not only growing frames of right-wing nationalism and antigenderism, but also burgeoning forms of feminist and queer resistance, whose intricacies and paradoxes complicate dominant perspectives in the field. Following a brief overview of the region's developments and contributions to the field, the present article uses this backdrop for an outline of several linguistic semiotic processes pertinent for tracing the dynamics of ‘gender ideology’ in discourse. More broadly, based on the complexities observed, the article emphasises the value of insights from postsocialist societies for rethinking the possibilities of true gender equality, within the wider struggles against the exploitation, marginalisation and dehumanisation pervasive in our current social reality.


Key words: ‘gender ideology’, antigenderism, postsocialist societies, Slavic-speaking societies


Gender-sensitive language use in Serbia

Tanja Petrović, Institute of Culture and Memory Studies ZRC SAZU

Abstract Charting dominant views on gender-sensitive language in the Serbian public sphere, this article points to the ways sociopolitical transformations are grasped and dealt with in postsocialist Serbia. It looks at a case where the legislative action by the state, namely the adoption of the Gender Equality Bill in 2021, disrupted the usual pattern of mutual support between national linguistic experts and the nationalist politics of the state. The debate on the use of social femininatives in Serbian reveals the political force of language ideologies of authenticity, authority, legitimacy and naturalness that mobilise various expert, politicaland social actors whose views often converge in an unexpected manner. It shows that the issue of gender equality in Serbia and in postsocialist Europe in general cannot always be seen as resulting exclusively from the mutually conditioned processes of social movement and countermovement, or of gender mainstreaming and anti-gender backlash; neither can its understanding be reduced to binaries of progressiveness/ openness/ liberalism/ Europeanness vs. conservatism/ nationalism/ authoritarianism/ anti-Europeanness. Rather, gender equality in these contexts must be seen as part of broader sociopolitical processes at both national and transnational levels.


Key words: language change, language mainstreaming, social femininatives, gender sesitive language, Serbia, postsocialism, EU accession


Women as a linguistic footnote

Roman Kuhar, Milica Antić Gaber, University of Ljubljana

Abstract The debate on nonsexist or gender-sensitive language in Slovenia has been taking place since the mid-1990s. It intensified again in 2018 when the Faculty of Arts, University of Ljubljana, decided to use the feminine grammatical gender in its internal regulations as generic and inclusive for all genders. The decision provoked heated public reactions and media reports. Through critical frame analysis of 60 media texts published between May and December 2018, this article identifies four basic frames: the decision as impermissible linguistic engineering, as a sign of excessive political correctness, as a false solution to the actual existence of sexism in language, or finally, as a positive change. Whereas many of the arguments used in the Slovenian debate were found in similar debates elsewhere, a new discursive frame emerged that cannot be placed on the classical dichotomy of feminist and antifeminist, but is instead based on equality fatigue and the understanding that gender equality has allegedly already been achieved.


Key words: linguistic gender bias, sexism, masculine generics, gender-fair language, gender-sensitive language, equality fatigue


Nonbinary Czech language

Vít Kolek, Palacký University Olomouc

Abstract As a morphologically rich Slavic language, Czech contains many possibilities for nonbinary language use. The broad aim of this article is to provide insights into existing and emerging nonbinary language strategies and the metadiscourses that surround them. After outlining the available means of gender-fair language, the analysis turns to possibilities for expressing nonbinarity, presenting emic insights regarding nonbinary community members’ own language use, choices, innovations and metalinguistic reflections, as well as wider out-group responses. Discourses coming from the nonbinary community draw attention to less understood connections of language, self-expression, authenticity and social perception, whereas outgroup discourses draw on broad views of what is ‘natural’ in language and society. Emerging voices suggest that despite the general absence of debates surrounding nonbinary language in Czech academia and public discourse, much is happening ‘underground’ in personal language use and community interactions, reflecting the ongoing negotiation of tensions between gender-normative structures and the range of feasible agentive practices used to subvert them.


Key words: gender-fair language, gender neutral language, LGBT , non-binary Czech , gender-inclusive language, Czech languge, transgender


'Rainbow plague' or 'rainbow allies'?

Dominika Baran, Duke University

Abstract The anti-genderism register, which demonises the LGBTQ+ community as promoters of so-called 'gender ideology', has spread in recent decades across right wing populist discourses around the world. In Poland, it is an important resource in right wing constructions of national identity, which appeal to a historicised account of Poland as the guardian of European Christianity. However, there is also a counternarrative that envisions Poland as a progressive member of the European Union with secular politics and respect for diversity in all its forms. In this context, the Polish lexeme tecza 'rainbow' is a floating signifier whose meanings are struggled over by opposing discourses of LGBTQ+ rights and their place in Polish public life. Drawing on an analysis of 521 texts from five media outlet types on the right and left wing sides of the political spectrum, this article examines the contestation of tecza as a site where the very meaning of present-day Polishness is discursively negotiated.


Key words: floating signifier, Poland, discourse theory, anti-genderism, corpus analysis, LGBTQ


Discursive acts of resistance

Małgorzata Chałupnik, University of Nottingham

Gavin Brookes, Lancaster University


Abstract Ogolnopolski Strajk Kobiet (All-Poland Women's Strike) is a grassroots campaign established in Poland in 2016 in response to the proposed tightening of abortion laws but which also engages with broader social, feminist and women's rights issues. Using a critical approach to multimodal discourse analysis, this article analyses the postings of the campaign on its main social media platform, Facebook, investigating closely the types of multimodal speech acts, referred to here as 'communicative acts', employed therein. The article examines the forms that such communicative acts take and the broader functions they fulfil within the (online and offline) context of the campaign. The observed communicative acts contribute towards and indeed enact the protest quite directly, forming an important part of the campaign's discourse of feminist dissent.


Key words: speech acts, communication acts, protest, abortion, reproductive rights, multimodal critical discourse studies, Poland


Feminine accent, masculine rapper

Tianxiao Wang, Xiamen University

Abstract The localisation of hip hop authenticity in non-African American communities across the globe is an enduringly controversial topic. This study provides evidence of hip hop authenticity construction in the Chinese context through an analysis of seemingly contradictory social meanings of fronted palatals in the Beijing dialect. While these sounds are considered to convey ‘soft’ femininity (i.e. so-called ‘feminine accent’), Beijing-based male rap artists utilise their acoustic character to evoke the iconic record scratch sound of rap music, and rely on the sounds’ sensory qualities – such as sharpness and harshness – to construct masculine and aggressive hip hop personas. By forging iconic links across multiple modalities, these rappers make the stylistic use of a variable traditionally associated with femininity a key element of their performance register, and reinforce the link between rap music and the performance of masculinity within the Chinese hip hop community.


Key words: hip-hop, authenticity, gender, iconicity, Mandarin Chinese


‘Balancing family time with fighting villains’

Laura Coffey-Glover, Nottingham Trent University

Jai Mackenzie, Newman University

Abstract This study provides a feminist stylistic account of gendered agency in a set of Disney Heroes collectible trading cards designed for young children. Through a mixed-methods analysis of grammatical, semantic and social agency in the texts, we show how the representation of male and female characters in these cards reinforces limiting, and potentially damaging, gender norms around menbeing more socially agentive, having more impact on the world around them and ultimately being more ‘heroic’ than women. There is some cause for optimism in the improved representation of female characters over time and the foregrounding of female heroes’ agentive roles in their worlds, but overall the cards uphold the hegemonic status quo. The quantitative and qualitative dimensions of this analysis also reveal quite different insights, demonstrating the importance of analyses that account for the way linguistic strategies are deployed in context, and in combination with a range of other resources.


Key words: disney, feminist stylistics, transitivity, children, toys


Cross-cultural issues in trans terminology

Konstantinos Argyriou, Institute of Philosophy (Spanish National Research Council, CSIC)

Abstract This article examines the applicability of trans terminology in non-Anglophone linguistic environments, particularly in Spanish and Modern Greek, two grammatical gender languages. The aim is to demonstrate the importance of cross-language comparisons that question the all-encompassing pretensions and universalist biases which still permeate the Western gender structure. Drawing on the methodological tools of double vision uncertainty, trans-crip-t time and translatxrsation, the article examines the particularities of both languages in terms of gender language scripts and representations, and offers a sociocultural analysis of how norms of the masculine generic, female semantic subordination and presumed binarism and cisgenderism have been consolidated, much to the detriment of sexual and gender diversity. Although this reflection stays within the Western paradigm, it focuses on peripheral models of gender diversity that help to deconstruct the binary and to queer gender in open dialogue with transnational realities, and calls for more cross-cultural and cross-language comparisons.


Key words: trans terminology, gender translation, monolingualism, cross-cultural comparison, Spanish, Greek


Humour and teasing in gay Taiwanese men’s mediatised interaction on an LGBTQ-oriented YouTube entertainment variety show

Li-Chi Chen, Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz

Abstract This study illustrates and discusses how young gay Taiwanese men interact with straight and nonstraight people through humour and teasing on an LGBTQ-oriented YouTube entertainment variety show in Taiwan. The analytical framework of the study is informed by multimodal discourse analysis and interactional sociolinguistics. Four strategies used to create humour are identified: performing wúlítóu ‘nonsense’, using quadrisyllabic (non)formulaic expressions, using gender subversion and using indirect insults (towards close female friends). The analysis suggests that all four strategies rely on indexical disjuncture and are used by young gay Taiwanese men not only to create humour, but also as a means of voicing themselves through online media in an environment where they still face many obstacles. The study argues that, as a discursive strategy, indexical disjuncture is at the very heart of Taiwanese camp.


Key words: Queer Identity, Taiwan, Humour



期刊简介

Gender and Language offers an international forum for language-based research on gender and sexuality from feminist, queer, and trans perspectives. While there are many journals focused on gender and many journals focused on language, Gender and Language is currently the only academic journal to which scholars interested in the intersection of these dimensions can turn, whether as contributors looking for an audience sharing this focus or as readers seeking a reliable source for current discussions in the field. The journal showcases research on the social analytics of gender in discourse domains that include institutions, media, politics and everyday interaction.


《性别与语言》提供了一个国际论坛,用于从女权主义者、酷儿和跨性别的角度对性别和性行为进行基于语言的研究。虽然有许多专注于性别的期刊和许多专注于语言的期刊,但 《性别与语言》 是目前唯一对这些维度交叉的学术期刊,是学者作为寻找分享这一焦点的读者的投稿人或作为读者,寻找该领域当前讨论的可靠来源。该杂志展示了在包括机构、媒体、政治和日常互动在内的话语领域中对性别的社会分析的研究。


Gender and Language welcomes research articles that display originality with respect to theoretical framing, use of empirical materials, timeliness, and/or methodological orientation. The journal also invites critical essays, interviews, exchanges, colloquia, commentaries and responses, brief translations of key articles originally published in languages other than English, profiles of key figures, reviews of recently published books and special issues devoted to topics of relevance to the field.


《性别与语言》欢迎在理论框架、经验材料的使用、及时性和/或方法取向方面表现出独创性的研究文章。该杂志还欢迎批判性论文、采访、交流、座谈会、评论和回应、最初以英语以外的其他语言发表的关键文章的简短翻译、关键人物的简介、对最近出版的书籍的评论以及专门针对与该主题相关的主题的特刊。


官网地址:

https://journal.equinoxpub.com/GL/index

本文来源:GENDER AND LANGUAGE官网



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