Representing Southeast Asia’s Female Leaders: An Unjust Perspective of New York Times on Woman in Politics
Date
2019-09-30Author
DIANA, Sabta
MAIRA, Navyta Yuli Mazaya
TALLAPESSY, Albert
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The study investigates the representation of Southeast Asian female Political Leaders by the US media,
New York Times (NYT). As one of 10 most influenced media in the US, NYT is assumed to uphold American
beliefs on equality of race, culture, age, status and gender and avoid gender issues. This paper aims to reveal
how female political leaders such as Corazon Aquino (Philippines), Megawati Sukarnoputri (Indonesia), Yingluck
Shinawatra (Thailand), and Halimah Yacob (Singapore) are depicted and represented in the NYT’s four news
articles written prior to their election. Halliday’s (2004) Systemic Functional Linguistics and Critical Discourse
Analysis framework by Fairclough (1989) are applied to analyse and to elaborate the language patterns used by
NYT for the purpose of revealing authors’ hidden perspectives and ideology on gender, especially from women’s
representation in mass media. The finding discloses that NYT’s choices of language or discourse constructs negative
image of female political leaders of Southeast Asia. Gender issues such as patriarchy, stereotype, and domestication
exist pervasively in the coverage despite their political success of leading their countries. NYT obviously shows
imbalance representation which gives attributions and labels to female political leaders in Southeast Asia through
the traditional gender ideology of the authors, which then possibly relates to how American society shapes the
discourse about female leaders’ involvement in politics in general.
Collections
- LSP-Conference Proceeding [1874]