Affiliation:
1. Jordan University of Science and Technology
Abstract
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to investigate the differences and similarities between Arabic and English parents’ role in
Arabic and English parenting website texts and the linguistic exponents used to address parents and signal their roles, and to find out the
socio-cultural ideologies that have given rise to variations in gender roles. To this end, a corpus of 40 articles targeting gender-neutral
titles and father related ones were selected equally from English and Arabic websites. Drawing on Van
Leeuwen’s (2008) framework on critical discourse analysis (CDA) and Sunderland’s (2000,
2006) framework of analysis, the data were analysed and contrasted. The English texts reflected the prevalence of ‘shared parenting’
discourse, whereas the Arabic ones revealed a ‘very traditional parenthood’ discourse. These differences can be attributed to variation in
the socio-cultural practices dominant in Arab and Western societies. Such findings will hopefully provide some useful insights for family
life educators and parents who resort to such websites.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Philosophy,Language and Linguistics
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