The opening and closing sequences of Malaysian vlogs / Goh Vern Jan

This paper looks at the opening and closing strategies of Malaysian vlogs. Aside from these strategies, the non-verbal communication of the vloggers are analysed as well. This paper also investigates the vlog viewers’ perception regarding the importance of openings and closings in vlogs. Frobenius’s...

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Main Author: Goh, Vern Jan
Format: Thesis
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5429/
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5429/1/title_page_original_literary_work_declaration_abstract_acknowledgement_table_of_contents.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5429/2/The_opening_and_closing_sequences_of_Malaysian_vlogs.pdf
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author Goh, Vern Jan
author_facet Goh, Vern Jan
author_sort Goh, Vern Jan
building UM Research Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper looks at the opening and closing strategies of Malaysian vlogs. Aside from these strategies, the non-verbal communication of the vloggers are analysed as well. This paper also investigates the vlog viewers’ perception regarding the importance of openings and closings in vlogs. Frobenius’s (2011) taxonomy of opening strategies and Coronel-Molina’s (1998) closing strategies are used as the framework for analyzing the data. Qualitative research is used to examine the data, which consists of 30 monologue vlogs from YouTube. The openings and closings of the vloggers are analysed using Conversation Analysis (CA). This approach facilitates the transcription of their monologues and the study of the structure of the openings and closings. Meanwhile, 40 viewers are interviewed online to obtain their opinions of opening and closing sequences. Content analysis is employed to inspect the responses of the viewers as it allows the extraction of lexical items that reflect their opinions. Apart from Frobenius’s (2011) strategies, the Malaysian vloggers used four other types of opening strategies: small talk, pleasantries, request for feedback and apologies. They also used three other closing strategies, which are not found in Coronel-Molina’s (1998) data: apologies, request for feedback and self-identification. Such findings suggest that opening and closing strategies are influenced by social and cultural expectations. Furthermore, the interview results show that Malaysian viewers generally consider opening and closing sequences important as they believe these sequences serve necessary functions. Keywords: vlog, monologue, opening sequence, closing sequence, Malaysian vloggers, viewer perception
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format Thesis
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institution University Malaya
institution_category Local University
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publishDate 2014
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling um-54292015-07-24T03:53:40Z The opening and closing sequences of Malaysian vlogs / Goh Vern Jan Goh, Vern Jan P Philology. Linguistics This paper looks at the opening and closing strategies of Malaysian vlogs. Aside from these strategies, the non-verbal communication of the vloggers are analysed as well. This paper also investigates the vlog viewers’ perception regarding the importance of openings and closings in vlogs. Frobenius’s (2011) taxonomy of opening strategies and Coronel-Molina’s (1998) closing strategies are used as the framework for analyzing the data. Qualitative research is used to examine the data, which consists of 30 monologue vlogs from YouTube. The openings and closings of the vloggers are analysed using Conversation Analysis (CA). This approach facilitates the transcription of their monologues and the study of the structure of the openings and closings. Meanwhile, 40 viewers are interviewed online to obtain their opinions of opening and closing sequences. Content analysis is employed to inspect the responses of the viewers as it allows the extraction of lexical items that reflect their opinions. Apart from Frobenius’s (2011) strategies, the Malaysian vloggers used four other types of opening strategies: small talk, pleasantries, request for feedback and apologies. They also used three other closing strategies, which are not found in Coronel-Molina’s (1998) data: apologies, request for feedback and self-identification. Such findings suggest that opening and closing strategies are influenced by social and cultural expectations. Furthermore, the interview results show that Malaysian viewers generally consider opening and closing sequences important as they believe these sequences serve necessary functions. Keywords: vlog, monologue, opening sequence, closing sequence, Malaysian vloggers, viewer perception 2014 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5429/1/title_page_original_literary_work_declaration_abstract_acknowledgement_table_of_contents.pdf application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5429/2/The_opening_and_closing_sequences_of_Malaysian_vlogs.pdf Goh, Vern Jan (2014) The opening and closing sequences of Malaysian vlogs / Goh Vern Jan. Masters thesis, University of Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5429/
spellingShingle P Philology. Linguistics
Goh, Vern Jan
The opening and closing sequences of Malaysian vlogs / Goh Vern Jan
title The opening and closing sequences of Malaysian vlogs / Goh Vern Jan
title_full The opening and closing sequences of Malaysian vlogs / Goh Vern Jan
title_fullStr The opening and closing sequences of Malaysian vlogs / Goh Vern Jan
title_full_unstemmed The opening and closing sequences of Malaysian vlogs / Goh Vern Jan
title_short The opening and closing sequences of Malaysian vlogs / Goh Vern Jan
title_sort opening and closing sequences of malaysian vlogs / goh vern jan
topic P Philology. Linguistics
url http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5429/
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5429/1/title_page_original_literary_work_declaration_abstract_acknowledgement_table_of_contents.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5429/2/The_opening_and_closing_sequences_of_Malaysian_vlogs.pdf