John
Grey's popular book 'Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus'
Dale
Spender and Pamela Fishman's challenges to what other theorists have said
From his research, Fisherman came to
the conclusion that women use tag questions such as ‘isn’t it?’ as an effective
method of beginning and maintaining conversations with males. She also states
that females do this to gain conversational power which in Lakoff’s is not the
case.Lakoff believes that men have the power within conversations and are the
powerful ones within conversation. This is stated in the dominance model which
says men dominate over women in a conversation. Even though both of these
theorists are female, they both have different views on how powerful they think
they are when it comes to men.
Dale Spender
Mary
Beard's ideas about women's voices not being valued
Mary Beard is
interested in the relationship between that classic Homeric moment of silencing
od silencing a woman and some of the ways women’s voices are not publicly heard
in our own contemporary culture.
For example, in the
old punch cartoon, one of the characters says “That’s
an excellent suggestion, Miss Triggs. Perhaps one of the men here would like to
make it”. This shows that even in the smallest situations such as a suggestion,
men get the finale word even if women came up with the ‘excellent suggestion’. Due
to it being in a cartoon also suggests that young children are even getting
influenced by the fact men are the dominant people and should over-power the female’s
voice.Mary looks at how the abuse of women speaking out even in
today’s society is subjected.
Mary quotes: ‘The culturally
awkward relationship between the voice of women and the public sphere of
speech-making, debate and comment: politics in its widest sense, from office
committees to the floor of the House. I’m hoping that the long view will help
us get beyond the simple diagnosis of ‘misogyny’ that we tend a bit lazily to
fall back on.’
O'Barr and Atkins's challenge to deficit theory
in turn keeps them in their place because being 'ladylike' precludes being 'powerful' in our culture. Such as Margret Thatcher changing her way of speaking so it sounded more masculine, therefore coming across as more powerful to gain support from the public in becoming Prime Minister.
Lakoff’s key point in this model is that is women speak
less frequently, it shows that they are listening to the male speaker and shows
this by using minimal responses such as the odd ‘yeah’ .In my opinion, this
also comes across as though the female is agreeing with the male as even if she
has a different point of view, she has no choice but to agree as the men’s
language is the norm.
William O'Barr and Bowman Atkins done a study in a courtroom in 1980.- They studied "language variation in a specific institutional context- the American trial courtroom - and sex-related differences" were the topic of this particular research.
- During the process of witness examination they analysed how trial lawyers and law professors.
- O'Barr and Atkins studied courtroom cases for 30 months, observing a broad spectrum of witnesses.
- They examined the witnesses for the ten basic speech differences between men and women that Robin Lakoff proposed.
O'Barr and Atkins
discovered that the differences that Lakoff and others supported are not
necessarily the result of being a woman, but of being powerless. They used
three men and three women to prove their point. The first man and woman both
spoke with a high frequency of "women's language" components. The
woman was a 68-year old housewife, and the man drove an ambulance. In
comparison to woman and man 3 who were a doctor and a policeman, respectively,
who both testified as expert witnesses .They show that the first pair of
witnesses experience less power in their jobs and lives. O'Barr and Atkins
found that pair 2 fell between pairs 1 and 3 in frequency of hedges and tag
questions, etcetera, in their speech.
Good detail and presentation. Check spelling of Fishman (you also said "his" by accident, so watch that) and remmber Lakoff is deficit not dominance.
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