A SPEECH ACT ANALYSIS OF COMMANDS USED BY MALE AND FEMALE STUDENTS AT SIXTH SEMESTER ACADEMIC YEAR 2012 OF ENGLISH DEPARTMENT IN FACULTY OF LETTERS OF JEMBER UNIVERSITY
Abstract
Misunderstanding in a conversation caused by gender has become a growing
issue for a long time. Gender is qualities and behaviours expected from a male or
female by society that makes male and female are accused to have certain quality.
The example of those qualities is women should use the low-rise intonation and
command a wider range intonation. Psychologically women tend to think emotionally
and man tends to think logically. Men tend to use direct language than women. One
of the examples is the way of giving command. Sometime woman and man are hard
to understand each other. Those differences lead the researcher to study the
differences between a man and a woman in giving command in English because
different way of thinking may lead to different understanding. Misunderstanding
leads to disappointment.
The goal of this research is to identify the types of command in English which
is mostly used by male and female students in seventh semester of English
Department in Faculty of Letters of Jember University, to identify the types of
command strategies that they mostly used related to the gender and also to find the
factors that related to gender that influence the selection of using the command. The
results are expected to help male and female students to understand each other; with
expectation the answer will reduce misunderstanding between male and female
students. By using the result male will try to understand female and vice versa.
This research uses Blum-Kulka (1982) DCT theory to investigate the case
happens in this study. In classifying commands the researcher uses theory of
commands conducted by Holmes in Richards and Schmidt (1983).The study applies qualitative research with sixth semester academic year 2012
of English Department in Faculty of Letters of Jember University as the object. This
study deals with interlanguage pragmatics of speech act which focuses on study of
linguistic commands.