Carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s March protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis

The 2017 Women's March is a histo-political icon in the US for women's rights, voice, solidarity, collective identity and power to resist Trump’s ideologized masculinity, racism and social hegemony. Although the multitude of protest posters in the Women’s March has become the core of resea...

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Main Authors: Sami Alhasnawi,, Raja’a Mizhir Radhi,
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2023
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21576/1/54454-204848-2-PB.pdf
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21576/
https://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1578
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spelling my-ukm.journal.215762023-05-19T08:37:03Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21576/ Carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s March protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis Sami Alhasnawi, Raja’a Mizhir Radhi, The 2017 Women's March is a histo-political icon in the US for women's rights, voice, solidarity, collective identity and power to resist Trump’s ideologized masculinity, racism and social hegemony. Although the multitude of protest posters in the Women’s March has become the core of research from different perspectives, there is still a scarce attention given to how Trump’s body compared to Putin’s was used to ridicule Trumpism through protestors’ multimodal protest posters. To cover such a research gap, this work, in turn, focuses mainly on grotesque imagery in the 2017 Women’s March for protesters to delegitimize and scorn Trump’s political agenda for ‘America First’ and ‘Make America Great Again’. Based on Bakhtin’s (1984a) carnival theory and carnivalesque as an overarching theoretical framework and Kress and van Leeuwen’s (2006) visual social semiotics as a methodological approach to the selected protest posters corpus, we found that a multimodal grotesque imagery of the Trump-Putin’s relationship was manipulated in the 2017 Women’s March as a counter discourse to vent protesters’ anger and resistance against Trumpism. A work like this will significantly add more to sociolinguistics and political linguistics in terms of considering linguistic and nonlinguistic units in communication. As such, this implies broadening the toolkit of analysis in applied linguistics. Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2023-02 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21576/1/54454-204848-2-PB.pdf Sami Alhasnawi, and Raja’a Mizhir Radhi, (2023) Carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s March protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis. GEMA ; Online Journal of Language Studies, 23 (1). pp. 140-158. ISSN 1675-8021 https://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1578
institution Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
building Tun Sri Lanang Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
content_source UKM Journal Article Repository
url_provider http://journalarticle.ukm.my/
language English
description The 2017 Women's March is a histo-political icon in the US for women's rights, voice, solidarity, collective identity and power to resist Trump’s ideologized masculinity, racism and social hegemony. Although the multitude of protest posters in the Women’s March has become the core of research from different perspectives, there is still a scarce attention given to how Trump’s body compared to Putin’s was used to ridicule Trumpism through protestors’ multimodal protest posters. To cover such a research gap, this work, in turn, focuses mainly on grotesque imagery in the 2017 Women’s March for protesters to delegitimize and scorn Trump’s political agenda for ‘America First’ and ‘Make America Great Again’. Based on Bakhtin’s (1984a) carnival theory and carnivalesque as an overarching theoretical framework and Kress and van Leeuwen’s (2006) visual social semiotics as a methodological approach to the selected protest posters corpus, we found that a multimodal grotesque imagery of the Trump-Putin’s relationship was manipulated in the 2017 Women’s March as a counter discourse to vent protesters’ anger and resistance against Trumpism. A work like this will significantly add more to sociolinguistics and political linguistics in terms of considering linguistic and nonlinguistic units in communication. As such, this implies broadening the toolkit of analysis in applied linguistics.
format Article
author Sami Alhasnawi,
Raja’a Mizhir Radhi,
spellingShingle Sami Alhasnawi,
Raja’a Mizhir Radhi,
Carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s March protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis
author_facet Sami Alhasnawi,
Raja’a Mizhir Radhi,
author_sort Sami Alhasnawi,
title Carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s March protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis
title_short Carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s March protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis
title_full Carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s March protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis
title_fullStr Carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s March protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis
title_full_unstemmed Carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s March protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis
title_sort carnivalesque humour in the 2017 women’s march protest posters against trumpism : a multimodal discourse analysis
publisher Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
publishDate 2023
url http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21576/1/54454-204848-2-PB.pdf
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/21576/
https://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1578
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score 13.18916