Affiliation:
1. Robert Gordon University
Abstract
Abstract
This article explores the mediated representation of gender in the Scottish public sphere during the independence
referendum in 2014. In particular, it focuses on a media sample drawn from the Scottish press that centres on two key political
figures, Johann Lamont and Nicola Sturgeon, who took part in a televised debate during the campaign. Using critical discourse
analysis, it looks at how language is used to construct overlapping discourses of gender in a specific cultural and national
context. Findings show representations pivot on expectations that female politicians should embody a specific feminised style; and
when gender norms appear to be violated, this is represented in negatively gendered terms. Though there is evidence of
contestation of male-dominated politics, discourses still reify traditional gender norms and situate women as outsiders to the
political sphere. This study shows how specific discursive frames can contribute to a cross-cultural practice of gendering women
in politics.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,History
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3. Women and Constitutional Debates: Engendering Visions of a New Scotland;Bell,2013
4. Understanding Women in Scotland
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