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Journal : AlphabetAlphabet: A Biannual Academic Journal on Language, Literary, and Cultural Studies

News Site as Virtual Linguistic Landscape: Representation on Linguistic Landscape and Multimodal Discourse Analysis Permana, Putu Gede Angga Mahaputra; Ma, Ling; Firdha Insani, Kania; Rusmawati, Roosi
Alphabet Vol. 6 No. 2 (2023)
Publisher : Universitas Brawijaya

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Abstract

This study explores the linguistic landscapes of virtual news articles and aims to determine the websites' choice of language from the linguistic perspective as well as to understand what distinct visual components are highlighted within the websites. This includes how the virtual linguistic landscape of news websites reflects cultural, political, and social ideologies; and examines how linguistic choices and multimodal elements influence the framing of news, the construction of identity, and the negotiation of power dynamics. The data for the study consists of five different international news sites which utilize English as the primary language. The study utilizes principles of Multimodal Discourse Analysis (MDA) and Linguistic Landscape (LL) theory from Pauwels (2012). By understanding how news organizations leverage the virtual linguistic landscape, we gain a deeper understanding of the dynamics that shape our contemporary information landscape and how language and visuals influence public discourse and collective comprehension.
The Perlocutionary Effect of “Insya Allah” among Indonesians: A Gender-Based Analysis Sapran, Aditya Rizky Wibisono; Rusmawati, Roosi
Alphabet Vol. 7 No. 1 (2024)
Publisher : Universitas Brawijaya

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.21776/ub.alphabet.2024.07.01.03

Abstract

This paper aims to investigate the perlocutionary effects of the utterance Insya Allah in commissive speech acts among Indonesians. Other studies have explored the roles and the illocutionary effects of Insya Allah, but none have pinpointed the perspective of the addressees upon hearing the utterance of a promise. The data were extracted from questionnaire results completed by 20 college students in Malang, an ideal city to represent Indonesia because it has more than 70% of students enlisted from various parts of Indonesia. This paper employs a descriptive qualitative method equipped with various technical analyses. The analysis includes investigations of the perlocutionary effects of Insya Allah. The analysis continues by addressing the details of the perlocutionary effects based on gender, followed by classifying the rationale behind such effects. The findings show a tendency from the respondents of being indecisive as the most prominent perlocutionary effect. The study also reveals three rationales behind the effects: theo-based, trait-based, and experience-based. Despite the religious value of Insya Allah, many Indonesians are reluctant to asso-ciate this utterance when it is inserted into a promise.