Desak Putu Eka Pratiwi, I. K. Sulatra, I. P. A. P. Rahayu
{"title":"Make It Happen: A Study of Verbal and Non-Verbal Signs Representing Feminism in an English Language Advertisement in ESL Setting","authors":"Desak Putu Eka Pratiwi, I. K. Sulatra, I. P. A. P. Rahayu","doi":"10.52462/jlls.112","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Advertisements are a powerful medium of communication because they often embed social messages in a few words or visuals. One such advertisement is the focus of the current study: Maybelline’s Make It Happen advertisement which conveys strong feministic values via the use of verbal and nonverbal signs. Being a product of mainly women’s interest, the advertisers bank upon the prevalent geopolitics to convey a dominant ideology: Women are equal competitors to men, and they can achieve this without having to forego all that they identify with their ‘being’. The study set out to (1) identify verbal and nonverbal signs in the Maybelline Make it Happen advertisement and (2) examine how the verbal and nonverbal signs present feminism values. The study uses a qualitative method and two theories in analyzing the data: Semiotic Theory by Saussure as cited by Daniel (2002), and Theory of Feminism by Abramovitz (1996). The finding shows that the verbal signs in this advertisement typically use motivating sentences which represent feminism values, while the nonverbal signs use colors, body language, outfits of the models, and the circumstance around the models, all of which play an important role in portraying feminism values.","PeriodicalId":16272,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-09-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.52462/jlls.112","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Advertisements are a powerful medium of communication because they often embed social messages in a few words or visuals. One such advertisement is the focus of the current study: Maybelline’s Make It Happen advertisement which conveys strong feministic values via the use of verbal and nonverbal signs. Being a product of mainly women’s interest, the advertisers bank upon the prevalent geopolitics to convey a dominant ideology: Women are equal competitors to men, and they can achieve this without having to forego all that they identify with their ‘being’. The study set out to (1) identify verbal and nonverbal signs in the Maybelline Make it Happen advertisement and (2) examine how the verbal and nonverbal signs present feminism values. The study uses a qualitative method and two theories in analyzing the data: Semiotic Theory by Saussure as cited by Daniel (2002), and Theory of Feminism by Abramovitz (1996). The finding shows that the verbal signs in this advertisement typically use motivating sentences which represent feminism values, while the nonverbal signs use colors, body language, outfits of the models, and the circumstance around the models, all of which play an important role in portraying feminism values.
广告是一种强大的沟通媒介,因为它们通常在几个单词或图像中嵌入社会信息。其中一个这样的广告是当前研究的重点:美宝莲的Make It Happen广告通过使用语言和非语言符号传达了强烈的女权主义价值观。作为一种主要为女性利益服务的产品,广告商依靠流行的地缘政治来传达一种占主导地位的意识形态:女性与男性是平等的竞争对手,她们可以在不放弃所有她们认同的“存在”的情况下实现这一点。该研究旨在(1)识别美宝莲“让它发生”广告中的语言和非语言符号,(2)研究语言和非语言符号如何呈现女权主义价值观。本研究采用定性方法,并采用两种理论分析数据:Daniel(2002)引用的索绪尔的符号学理论和Abramovitz(1996)的女性主义理论。研究发现,该广告中的语言符号典型地使用了代表女权主义价值观的激励句,而非语言符号则使用了模特的颜色、肢体语言、服装以及模特周围的环境,这些都在塑造女权主义价值观方面发挥了重要作用。