The study considers mass media communication as intertwined with social norms, as assumed by the perspective of social representations. It explores the Italian press communication by focusing on three pairs of men and women politicians with different political orientations and all serving as presidents of the Houses of Parliament in three legislatures. The article concentrates on five newspapers in order to sound out the presence of a possible gender bias in favor of men in the coverage. It explores the strategic use of language to enhance or penalize the role of women politicians. In order to scrutinize the role of gender visibility and discrimination, the study compares how women and men presidents are named and examines the linguistic sexism/nonsexism used for women politicians also in relation to the ideological/cultural orientations of newspapers. Thereby, 591 headlines were collected and analyzed with SPAD-T statistical package. The results, for some cases, confirm the trends revealed in the international literature, in other cases, disprove expectations.

Italian Political Communication and Gender Bias: Press Representations of Men/Women Presidents of the Houses of Parliament (1979, 1994, and 2013) / Sensales, Gilda; Areni, Alessandra; Dal Secco, Alessandra. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIETY, CULTURE & LANGUAGE. - ISSN 2329-2210. - STAMPA. - 4:2(2016), pp. 22-38.

Italian Political Communication and Gender Bias: Press Representations of Men/Women Presidents of the Houses of Parliament (1979, 1994, and 2013)

SENSALES, Gilda;ARENI, Alessandra;
2016

Abstract

The study considers mass media communication as intertwined with social norms, as assumed by the perspective of social representations. It explores the Italian press communication by focusing on three pairs of men and women politicians with different political orientations and all serving as presidents of the Houses of Parliament in three legislatures. The article concentrates on five newspapers in order to sound out the presence of a possible gender bias in favor of men in the coverage. It explores the strategic use of language to enhance or penalize the role of women politicians. In order to scrutinize the role of gender visibility and discrimination, the study compares how women and men presidents are named and examines the linguistic sexism/nonsexism used for women politicians also in relation to the ideological/cultural orientations of newspapers. Thereby, 591 headlines were collected and analyzed with SPAD-T statistical package. The results, for some cases, confirm the trends revealed in the international literature, in other cases, disprove expectations.
2016
social representations theory; political communication; gender bias; linguistic sexism/nonsexism; lexicographical analysis
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Italian Political Communication and Gender Bias: Press Representations of Men/Women Presidents of the Houses of Parliament (1979, 1994, and 2013) / Sensales, Gilda; Areni, Alessandra; Dal Secco, Alessandra. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIETY, CULTURE & LANGUAGE. - ISSN 2329-2210. - STAMPA. - 4:2(2016), pp. 22-38.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/866816
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