The Sociolinguistic Study on the Binan Terms Regarded as Slang of the Gay Community in Jember
Abstract
Language is a certain device used by people to communicate in sorts of topic
and purpose both in spoken and in written. In this study, the subject of the research is
spoken language which is used by a certain speech community, in this case the gay
community in Jember. The gay community in Jember has its own distinctive
language which is different from the standard language, as what Gumperz (1979:25)
said that the speech community is a number of people who usually create their own
language and they use the language to identify which groups in society they belong
to. The terms which are created and used by the gay people are called Binan terms.
Binan terms have unique word formations. The word formations of Binan terms
basically include derivational processes including unique affixes and word
substitutions. Binan terms are included in one of language varieties, called slang.
Binan term has certain purposes behind its creation. This study concerns three
major problems, those are: first, the word formations of the gay terms; second, the
reasons of using the gay terms; third, the occasions when the gay usually uses the gay
terms. There are eight processes of the word formations of the gay term. Those word
formations basically include word substitutions and word omissions. There are four
reasons of using the gay terms, those are: secrecy, solidarity, prestige, and the need to
show social identity. The use of the gay terms is influenced by some factors such as
the status scale between the speaker and the hearer, a social distance scale between
the speaker and the hearer, formality scale or the setting of interaction, and the
purposes or topic of interactions.
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The type of research used in this study is qualitative research. Suzan and
Mackey (2005:152) state, “Qualitative research is a research based on descriptive
data.” In this study, the researcher still involves numerical measurement to get more
valid data, as what Grix (2004:120) explains that qualitative analysis comprises the
data which are not in the form of number, but it is still able to involve numerical
measurement. The techniques of collecting data in this study consist of observation,
interview, and questionnaire. In this study, the researcher uses semi-structured
interviews. The researcher uses a written list of questions as a guide, while she is still
having the freedom to digress and probe for more information. In the interview, the
researcher interviews two of the gay members of the gay community in Jember. To
get more valid data, the researcher also uses questionnaires. Six out of ten gay
members of the gay community in Jember participate in the questionnaires.