Representation of women in advertisements in Arabic and English magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach

This thesis is concerned with investigating the representations of ideal femininity in cosmetics’ advertising discourse in two versions of ELLE print magazine, ELLE ARABIA and ELLE UK. It also aims at examining the linguistic and semiotic persuasive strategies advertisers employ to construct such id...

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Main Author: Altuwaijri, Nada
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60792/
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author Altuwaijri, Nada
author_facet Altuwaijri, Nada
author_sort Altuwaijri, Nada
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis is concerned with investigating the representations of ideal femininity in cosmetics’ advertising discourse in two versions of ELLE print magazine, ELLE ARABIA and ELLE UK. It also aims at examining the linguistic and semiotic persuasive strategies advertisers employ to construct such ideals. Moreover, it investigates the readers’ perspectives and perceptions of cosmetics advertisements. Thus, a triangulated method is applied to the data: Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis (MCDA), Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) and focus groups. MCDA and CDA are applied to the dataset of advertising discourse to cross-culturally examine the ideal feminine figure and female identities presented in the data, while focus groups are conducted to elicit readers’ perceptions of the adverts’ content. The adverts’ analysis has revealed that there are seven contradictory gendered identities represented to women as ideals which are: the active, the relaxed, the dependent, the friendly, the childish, the rebel and the mysterious. The ideal feminine figure depicted for Saudi and British readers is almost identical: a white, young and natural looking woman who achieves her feminine look through the application of cosmetic products. The discourse analysis and the focus group discussions have proved that there is a gap between the ideals depicted in the adverts and the views and perceptions of real women in both groups, but it was greater in the Saudi group where the ideal was a Western woman. Hence, advertisers present an ideal that does not reflect the women who read the magazines or their society. They are rather promoting a pseudo-culture with new definitions of feminine beauty and ideal female identities. Comparative analysis of linguistic and semiotic strategies found in ELLE ARABIA and ELLE UK have revealed that both versions constitutes of a variety of strategies, however, the British version included more of the persuasive strategies than the Arabic version. Advertising discourse affects the power relations in society, and that is clear through the analysis where adverts encourage women to believe that make up is a necessity to be acceptable in society. Consequently, adverts create a link between consumerism and the construction of identity through lifestyles leading to a globalised culture based on consumption.
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spelling nottingham-607922025-02-28T14:56:41Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60792/ Representation of women in advertisements in Arabic and English magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach Altuwaijri, Nada This thesis is concerned with investigating the representations of ideal femininity in cosmetics’ advertising discourse in two versions of ELLE print magazine, ELLE ARABIA and ELLE UK. It also aims at examining the linguistic and semiotic persuasive strategies advertisers employ to construct such ideals. Moreover, it investigates the readers’ perspectives and perceptions of cosmetics advertisements. Thus, a triangulated method is applied to the data: Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis (MCDA), Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) and focus groups. MCDA and CDA are applied to the dataset of advertising discourse to cross-culturally examine the ideal feminine figure and female identities presented in the data, while focus groups are conducted to elicit readers’ perceptions of the adverts’ content. The adverts’ analysis has revealed that there are seven contradictory gendered identities represented to women as ideals which are: the active, the relaxed, the dependent, the friendly, the childish, the rebel and the mysterious. The ideal feminine figure depicted for Saudi and British readers is almost identical: a white, young and natural looking woman who achieves her feminine look through the application of cosmetic products. The discourse analysis and the focus group discussions have proved that there is a gap between the ideals depicted in the adverts and the views and perceptions of real women in both groups, but it was greater in the Saudi group where the ideal was a Western woman. Hence, advertisers present an ideal that does not reflect the women who read the magazines or their society. They are rather promoting a pseudo-culture with new definitions of feminine beauty and ideal female identities. Comparative analysis of linguistic and semiotic strategies found in ELLE ARABIA and ELLE UK have revealed that both versions constitutes of a variety of strategies, however, the British version included more of the persuasive strategies than the Arabic version. Advertising discourse affects the power relations in society, and that is clear through the analysis where adverts encourage women to believe that make up is a necessity to be acceptable in society. Consequently, adverts create a link between consumerism and the construction of identity through lifestyles leading to a globalised culture based on consumption. 2020-07-24 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60792/1/Nada%20Altuwaijri%20PhD%20Thesis%20July%202020.pdf Altuwaijri, Nada (2020) Representation of women in advertisements in Arabic and English magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Critical Discourse Analysis Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis Advertisements
spellingShingle Critical Discourse Analysis
Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis
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Altuwaijri, Nada
Representation of women in advertisements in Arabic and English magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach
title Representation of women in advertisements in Arabic and English magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach
title_full Representation of women in advertisements in Arabic and English magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach
title_fullStr Representation of women in advertisements in Arabic and English magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach
title_full_unstemmed Representation of women in advertisements in Arabic and English magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach
title_short Representation of women in advertisements in Arabic and English magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach
title_sort representation of women in advertisements in arabic and english magazines: a multimodal critical discourse approach
topic Critical Discourse Analysis
Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis
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url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/60792/