Friday, July 8, 2022

A Feminist Stylistics Study of a Namibian Short Story in English

 

A Feminist Stylistics Study of a Namibian Short Story in English

 By: Uerimanga Tjijombo

Abstract

This assignment delivers a feminist stylistic analysis short story in Namibia: Lana’s story by Berchen Kohrs. The aim is to find how Bertchen Kohrs how the language is used to present women and to know the key purpose of the short story.  This short story represented women being treated by men based on their status as well as their level their qualifications. This short story includes how women are being abused by men.  A study has shown that women characters are lower than men Nyathi and Malapong, (2002). According to Nyathi, (2012), women are the victim of men being abused by men by beaten by men in their marriage. Most women characters depend on their fathers, (Malopong, 2002). He describes women as attractive goodness because they can be only valued according to how they look, therefore they are quality is decreased by their sprits appearance. In addition, both writers used linguistic devices such as metaphors and figures to bring awareness to gender roles that are expected of women like working in the garden to provide food for their families and working as domestic workers as a sexual pleasure to their husbands. The study presented women as voiceless and powerless in many facts. The study for both Nyathi (2012) and Malapong (2002) describes women as undesirably, and the feminist stylistic was framework was successful in bringing these presentations to light.

Keywords: drama, feminism, stylistics, gender, representation, feminist stylistics

 

Background

The importance of language is not for communication only but it has a lot to do with culture, gender, and politics to view reality (Ufot, 2012). One of the interesting things in Namibia literature is drama. There is a lot that describes Namibia that is including social issues such as gender by not people treated equally in Namibia life in general (Mbise & Vale, 1998). Women in Namibia still are not treated equally compared to men in Namibia. In Namibia, there are a lot of stereotypes that make women treated like men, most people in Namibia believe in tradition, customary law, and cultural practices that make more men discriminate against women in many conditions (Ruppel, 2008).   The writer has found it interesting in analysing how the language used in Namibian plays dealing with gender issues more specifically represents women’s feminist stylistics approach. Feminist stylistics challenged roles as wives or mothers before feminism. It is a sensibility that is deeply rooted in a popular consciousness and mass awareness of the nature of human and social existence (mill, 1995).

Problem statement

It is factual that most gender is manipulated and defined by their sexes. That the problem that exists now has known is the high expectation of traditional roles of women are still exist reminded of their traditional values and gender position which is in their language of literature. Women are treated as marginalized people.  Demotion and subordinating of women in traditional societies have been a concern for those who believe in the quality of gender. This given confrontation of feminism has often been used as a way by feminist writers for their women by believing in themselves. However, this strategy has given good results to women in Africa. With fewer issues raised above, there is a need to readdress a feminist stylistic approach that is devoid of confrontational and radical tendencies. Maybe feminism which embraces a symbiotic relationship among the sexes may yield greater and more effective results for the women since language and style are the major weapons in the dissemination of the feminist message (Ufot, 2012).

Objectives of the short story

The main aim of this study is to analyse how short stories in linguistics perceptive can be used to explain the short story.

These short story-specific objectives are:

·         to carry out a short story linguistic analysis of the spoken language in the short story in feminist perceptive.

·         to examine how short stories, comprehend the feminist language in relation to their cultural background and their goals of interaction in the cultural perceptive. 

·         to identify the specific linguistic-based challenges such as feminist lexical phrases faced by lay females in the short story process with a view to describing them.

·         to offer suggestions on how feminist linguistics can be used to avoid language to misinterpreted during communication. 

 

A review of Namibian short stories in English

The researcher used a feminist stylistics approach to do an analysis at the level of word, phrase, and discourse in order to examine Lana story feminist concerns in her three stories that deconstruct traditional patriarchal fairy tales. The findings revealed that Lana’s story established ideologies and stereotyping of gender roles with a feminist interest. As a result, she not only deconstructs the sexist connotations of earlier fairy tales but also presents new stories to weaken female oppression through language by understanding the power of language in producing and reinforcing sexism.

Lana’s story researcher discovered that Bertchen Kohrs constructs the image of Lana as an individual who is struggling with the teachings of Namibia tradition through a feminist stylistic analysis of the image of female Lana in short stories. The female characters' parents, particularly the father, shape the image of the African, demonstrating that they are fulfilling their role as African trust.' Men are superior to women in African culture. findings of the short story "Lana story," in which the analysis revealed that language serves as a vehicle for the transmission of social, cultural, economic, and psychological forces or meanings in the representation of women at various stages, such as at home or at work, where women are portrayed as subordinates.

The patriarchal ideology in the presentation of women is inherent in the writer's thought structures, which are presented at the lexical, syntactical, and discourse levels of the short story. The short story writer has not only presented the social and economic roles and status of women characters as compared to male characters, but also the patriarchal ideology in the presentation of women, which is inherent in the writer's thought structures, which are presented at the lexical, syntactical, and discourse levels of the short story. They went on to say that this is a regular occurrence in women's representations in general and that this scenario should be changed. It does not, however, explain the power that these types of representations have for female listeners or the reasons why women, in particular, are the focus of this type of representational practice, nor does it recognize the other messages in the text that undermine the female character's dominant passive role. Looked at gender representation in advertising language through the lens of feminist stylistics, looking at the word and clausal naming devices, stylistic features, and rhetorical devices to see how advertisers and copywriters use language to portray women.

Their male colleagues, on the other hand, have a great deal of autonomy in the same case Lana did not say anything about her husband’s behaviours due to cultural practices she decide to keep quiet. She told her friend was about to further her study and take care of her children since she believe that the future will bright for her but unfortunately, her life end in halfway, and she was killed by her husband under the influence of alcohol. Her friend was shocked when she had about her death she did not advise anything. Every woman has the right to the recognition and preservation of her human and legal rights, according to the agreement. It contains articles on marriage equality, access to justice and political participation, women's safety in armed conflict, and education, training, and health care. Due to the culture of Africa people turn to ignore even those who are mistreated do not take it seriously till something bad happens to them and people in the surroundings do not speak about all these bad things. In the review of this short story, the researcher has realized that women's marginalization and invisibility in African policy-making is still a hot topic in the worldwide debate. Restrictive laws, cultural diversities, and customs, institutional hurdles, and uneven access to quality education, healthcare, and resources are all likely causes for concern. Men use language to subordinate women, according to the more extreme interpretations, while women respond by tiptoeing around men in their language use. This exposes the presence of sexism in language, which can be detected in a variety of ways, including the use of stereotypes, generic terms, derogatory or offensive words, and expressions that imply objectification (Baker & Ellece, 2011, p. 129).

Namibia's society was extremely patriarchal and racially divided until it attained independence. The patriarchal system is based on paterfamilias, which means that the man is the household's head. As a result, his wife would be his 'property,' and she would be his slave. However, there has been a paradigm shift in human rights conceptions since the adoption of the Namibian Constitution in 1990. The Namibian Constitution sets a strong foundation for gender equality because it is one of the few constitutions in the world that employs gender-neutral language throughout and expressly prohibits discrimination based on gender (Ambunda & DeKlerk, 2008). In Namibia, women continue to confront obstacles in achieving equality with their male counterparts. Due to conventional beliefs and gender stereotyping, women continue to face uneven treatment in many areas of life, particularly under customary law. Patriarchy and men's discriminatory attitudes are frequently justified by citing tradition, customary law, and specific cultural customs (Ruppel, 2008).

Women expect to specialize more in the reproductive role, therefore there are fewer incentives for them to acquire human capital through education. As a result, many women do not complete their education and instead marry younger due to cultural expectations from their families. Many African women, in particular, are trained to be good spouses and mothers, and as a result of these cultural expectations, they readily accept the reproductive role and obligations. Men assume that women's place is in the home and men's place is outside the home, which limits women's participation outside the home and men's participation inside the home (Husselmann, 2016). As a result, the writers are influenced by the existing sociological condition of women in Namibia. According to Adedoja (2010), the social significance of literature cannot be disputed because literature cannot be isolated from social ideals (p. 34). It's mostly about social ideals and how they're projected by different writers in different generations. This argument includes Namibian literature, which includes the plays under consideration.

To begin with, women in Namibian literature are portrayed in a bad light. Sifiso Nyathi, a Namibian novelist, for example, writes about Kachana, a woman character with questionable morality, in his work The Other Presence (2008). Kachana is notorious for drinking excessively and associating with guys, as opposed to her female counterparts who only associate with women. The author did not represent the guys who keep Kachana Company as similarly wicked or unfit, despite the fact that they were also intended to bear the brunt of the guilt for being in each other's company.

Finally, Woldemariam’s (2018)'s study "Improving sociolinguistic competence through feminist stylistics" confirms that gender discrimination through language exists, as one of its major findings was that women figures in the two poems studied are given inferior positions, and men are visionary and resourceful, while women are emotional.

A review of research articles focusing specifically on feminist stylistics

Feminism, according to Ray (2013, p. 4), is a conscious awareness of patriarchal control, exploitation, and oppression at the material and ideological levels of women's labour, fertility, and sexuality, in the family, at work, and in society as a whole, as well as conscious action by women and men to change the current situation. Gibbons (1999) defines feminism as a practice and a philosophy that challenges social arrangements on the relative value, status, positions, duties, and opportunities of men and women. Women are oppressed, according to feminists, and are treated differently. Women face not only personal but also institutional prejudice in a patriarchal system that benefits men. Feminist linguists argue that language can be used to generate and reflect gender inequality. Language, according to Mills (1995), is a social behaviour and a method of social control. As a result, according to Holmes (1997), linguistic behaviour reflects complicated social meanings.

We exert or relinquish power over language by indicating the various social groups with which we identify, the social roles we embrace, and the frequently contradictory ideals we promote. (p.195) Feminist criticism is a theory that originated in the United States and France and has extended into feminist stylistics. Feminist criticism derives its theoretical foundations from the greater feminist movement, which argues for gender equality in social, political, and economic matters. However, the feminist movement's dialectical inconsistencies and tensions have made it impossible to define it precisely. Language, as a means of communication, is permeated with male bias, according to feminist criticism. Sexist beliefs can be communicated through descriptions of girls and guys, even when no generic masculine rhetoric is used or when remarks are openly derogatory. In newspaper reporting about women's atrocities, there is an intentional marginalization of women (Holmes, 1997).

According to Verma (2016), sexism in language is one of the most constitutive components of feminist stylistics, and it deals with the use of language in defining the function and place of a specific gender in social interaction. Sexist language, according to Mills (1995), is the language that is used by a speaker, whether consciously or unconsciously, to alienate females and create an environment that is not conducive to communication and effective social relationships. As a result, feminist stylistics or feminism analysis is primarily concerned with language, as language is the primary medium of meaning that serves to maintain dominant relationships. Thus, studying.  Stylistics, according to Verdnok (2013, p.12), is an interdisciplinary phenomenon that studies the relationship between literary results and language means. The multidisciplinary nature of the work demonstrates that current stylistics has expanded beyond classical rhetoric to encompass cognitive, pragmatic, corpus, pedagogical, multimodal, gender, and other methods (Burke, 2014). Simpson (2004) goes on to say that feminist and cognitive stylistics are two established schools of stylistics that have contributed to the enrichment of stylistic methodologies. Feminism in a literary text entails examining the ways in which meaning contributes to the perpetuation of dominant relationships. To put it another way, language is not only a means of communication or even information, but it is also a tool of power (Darweesh & Ghayadh, 2016). Stylistics is a method of applied language research that makes discoveries about the structure and function of language through textual analysis (Simpson, 1997, p. 4). Stylistics originated in the 1960s, influenced by formalism, literary criticism, and linguistics, according to Stockwell (2006). Due to the requirement to account for aberrant forms in the study of poetry and prose, stylistics gained significant traction in the 1970s. Stylistics was focused on the linguistic study of literature, whereas non-literary studies were referred to as 'critical linguistics,' 'critical discourse analysis,' 'text linguistics,' and so on. Although Burke (2014, p. 1) points out that stylistics can be used in the study of non-literary texts, stylistics is referred to as literary stylistics.

According to Short and Semino (2008, p.117), stylistic analysis is a type of linguistic criticism that aims to provide objective and scientific critique based on concrete quantifiable data and applied in a systematic manner rather than subjective emotions and wants. To put it another way, we can figure out how we interpret a text by looking at the linguistic organization of the text and how a reader, informed model, or super reader interacts with that linguistic organization to produce meaning. As a result, it is possible to conclude that every style analysis is an attempt to discover the aesthetic principles underlying a writer's linguistic choices of language. As a result, according to Holmes (1997), language behaviour reflects complicated social meanings. We establish or relinquish power over language by indicating the various social groups with which we identify, the social roles we embrace, and the frequently contradictory values we espouse.

Feminist stylistics emerged as a branch of stylistics in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when the trend of contextualization was proving to be advantageous in literary stylistic studies. It shares concepts and language models with critical stylistics because feminist analysis of texts is one of the most powerful and politically necessary expressions of the analysis of literature as a product of social relations (Birch, 1989). Burton (1982) is also a significant person in the feminist stylistics field.

The feminist approach to stylistics is now most closely connected with Sara Mills' and Deirdre Burton's recent works, as well as Virginia Woolf's critical intervention and French feminists like Jacques Lacan, Helene Cixous, and Luce Irigaray. It claims that men have a predominance over how women are treated in society and how they are portrayed in literature. As a result, it uses its words to create an honest counter-image of women. The goal of this stylistic approach is to investigate how literature represents (or does not express) a distinct female consciousness. In the process, literary art is primarily viewed as a vehicle for highlighting female perspectives and dismantling male prejudices about women.

Feminist statisticians want to bring women into the spotlight (Ufot, 2012). Feminist stylistics, according to Blaine (1990, p. 3), is the strongest successor to critical stylistics, focusing on unmasking patriarchal ideas and denaturalizing patriarchal assumptions. As a result, the purpose of this stylistic method is to investigate the evolution of language and social change. This is accomplished by attempting to dismantle language's figurative and expressive potential, which favours women's subordination, dehumanization, and enslavement in society. As a result, feminist stylistics focuses on the interpretation of texts from a feminist perspective. It recognizes that there are linguistic correlates to society's subjugation of women to men, and it sets out to not only uncover but also abolish these correlations. The self-conscious initiatives by female writers to modify established patterns of language use are highlighted in a methodical manner by feminist stylisticians. They do so by detecting the dialectical aspects of such writings, as well as alternative ways of expression. The feminist ethos serves as the grounding idea for this approach to stylistics, which covers a wide range of topics and skills in textual analysis.

Major Findings (Analysis and Interpretation of extracts from the Namibian short story   selected

After reading Lana’s story, one can see that women in Namibia continue to face challenges by being treated the same compared to men. In many ways of life as Lana explained to a friend she was very good and she expected to have a wonderful relationship with his husband Paul, who was a well-qualified engineer and working for a good company that gave him accommodation in the company house. To look at things under customary law, women are still subject to unequal treatment due to traditional beliefs and gender for not being in the same position.  Lana was explained as the smartest woman than her husband but she did not have qualifications due to the African belief that women must not be equal to their men. Lana has accepted life as good life since she admitted African cultural practices which are frequently cited to justify patriarchy and men’s discriminatory attitudes. 

Many women in Africa, special those who are expected to be good wives and mothers, that what was applied to Lana she thought she has achieved as an African woman because of this cultural expectation, she did not know that things will change one day she did not both about to further her study until Paul her husband she her attitudes to alcohol and being African man who assumes the reproductive role and responsibilities without much protest. Men as well assume that women’s place in the home and that men’s is outside the home, which limits the participation of women outside the home and men in the home. Lana when she got married she was pregnant with another man, but Paul used his manpower just like other African men not to worry to stay with the child because she loved his mother he did not mind taking the child his child.

 It is true that in some instances, gender differences are manipulated widely in defining sexes. The problem at hand is that expectations and the traditional roles of women are instilled in the language of literature such as plays to function as a reminder of women’s gendered position. The choice of words validates and promotes patriarchal thinking to perceive women as the marginalised gender. Because of survival and lack of qualification Lana knows that his husband started sleeping around with another woman but because of African behaviour and attitudes she decides to accept to stay so that she can take care of her children, in the name of her husband because she had a belief that she will be going to suffer if she divorced the husband.

Her friend did advise her since both of them seem to believe on the same page since they were friends. Lana was married a very year at the age of 18, as a woman African, she had to believe that she has settled. She went to visit a friend, thinking that perhaps her friend will advise her differently but her friend did not do anything. This encompasses, among other things, prejudice against widows, discrimination against women with fertility troubles, discrimination against unmarried women of specific ages, lack of inheritance for girl children, female genital mutilation, and gender bias. In a normal African civilization, women are supposed to be well-behaved, decent wives, and not interrupt their elders.

Lana's story would not sit well with three ladies from Opuwo's Great Kunene Region, who have expressed their opinions based on how males treat them. Kat stated that she wanted her husband to regard her as a friend. She does not want to know much about her husband's personal life, but she does want him to value her. According to her beliefs, males are not equal to men, but she desired to be respected as a woman like any other woman. She wants to feel like she's a part of her husband's life. According to the researcher's findings, most men are selfish; they would want to be helped by their women, but they prefer not to help their women, educational, economical, and emotional. She departs in the manner of African life, but she wishes to depart in the manner of Africans, but in a modern manner. The researcher believes that Namibian women, particularly those from Opuwo, desire not to get away from their African culture but don't want to lose out on the treats. Women deserve to be treated like other women; it doesn't matter how you act as long as they don't know what you're doing.

Another Opuwo woman, Zaku, stated that she does not expect much from her husband but that she wants to gain from him, and that if she does not contribute anything in the way of tangible things, she must show her love by paying more attention. She stated that she does not need to access her husband's phone, but that her spouse must not do things that cause her to wonder what he is doing with his phone. She does not want her husband to hide his phone, particularly if he does it by turning it upside down. The majority of women, according to the study, want to be loved and respected as women, just like other women who have seen their husbands treat them properly. However, these Opuwo women respect their tradition, but what they seek from men is true love, which they do not receive from their spouses or partners. The researcher discovered that women have been mistreated by their men since most women, according to their culture, are unable to speak up and express their feelings about how men should treat them.

Another talkative lady, Lenzy, stated a few things, but she was quite precise because she said, "I will be very glad if a man values me since I do not rely on men." She also remarked, "A man cannot be a failed man, even to provide attention to your women." She stated that if a man is unable to support her, he should at least contact her every day or send her a text to say good morning or good evening. Women from the Great Kunene region, specifically from Opuwo, do not expect much from men and do not want to push them too hard. All they seek is genuine love and respect.

 

Recommendations 

A feminist stylistic analysis of one Namibian short story was offered in the study. Despite the fact that the researcher considers his own findings to be the sexist roots of his research, he believes that women express some fundamental truths with amazing clarity. He makes a compelling case that respect is a core, and an absolutely necessary, component of a good marriage (albeit more so for males than females, in his opinion), and he uses a number of compelling examples to demonstrate how a shift toward unconditional respect can breathe new life into a relationship. If he emphasizes a universal truth, it is one that is applicable to both men and women. His understanding of the insane cycle, for example, is that a wife reacts without respect to her husband's lack of love, and a husband reacts without love to his wife's lack of respect.

Rather than this formulation, the researcher proposes that when one spouse fails to satisfy the other's innermost needs for both love and respect, the second partner will respond defensively and fail to meet the first partner's deepest wants for both love and respect in return.

It may be simpler to give ideas by making broad generalizations about huge groups of people, but a thoughtful approach necessitates evaluating the unique character and traits of each individual and each close relationship. Maybe men and women don't inhabit such disparate worlds after all.

Conclusions

The primary goal of this analysis was to examine the short story. The researcher might learn a lot from women if they love their spouses as they expect to be loved because they do what they anticipate from men. If given the choice, women would prefer respect and love over feeling insulted and inadequate, according to the researcher. He gathered this data from the perspective of a female and discovered that a similar majority would prefer not to feel mistreated and inadequate than appreciated and loved. Based on this knowledge, it was determined that a woman need love in the same way that she requires air to breathe, and a husband requires respect in the same way that he requires oxygen to breathe.

 

 

 

References

 

Adedoja, E. F. (2010). Social relevance of African literature to the promotion of social values.

 

Ambunda, L., & De Klerk, S. (2003). Women and custom in Namibia: A research overview.         Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale in terms of Sara Mills’ model: A feminist stylistic study.       British Journal of English Linguistics, 3, 21-34 . Retrieved from http://www.eajournals.org/wp-content/uploads          Austen's Pride and Prejudice and  Hume-Sotomi's The Theory and Practice. Language

 

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