Affiliation:
1. Albert-Einstein-Gymnasium Munich
Abstract
Abstract
This article investigates the linguistic manifestations of gender discriminating stereotypes in the news
coverage of the 2015 rape case “People v. Turner”. The case centers around a rape perpetrated by Brock Turner on the Stanford
University campus in California. Articles from the online edition of the Stanford Daily are systematically
analysed with respect to rape-myth consistent argumentation, amount of coverage granted to the perspectives of victim and
perpetrator, naming/labelling of victim and perpetrator, and the transitivity choices that were made. All these factors can be
identified in the news coverage of the Brock Turner case in one way or another. They result in victim blaming and mitigating
perpetrator responsibility serving to show that sexist reporting is still an important issue where serious crimes like rape
are concerned. Such linguistic practices re-victimise victims of sexist violence and ultimately contribute to a misogynist
discourse and the reproduction and perpetuation of sexist stereotypes.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference42 articles.
1. Freshman swimmer Brock Turner faces five felony counts after alleged rape;Beyda,2015
2. Police report: Brock Turner admits sexual contact, denies alleged rape;Beyda,2015
3. Writing about rape: Use of the passive voice and other distancing text features as an expression of perceived responsibility of the victim
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