PERBEDAAN TUTURAN PEREMPUAN DAN LAKI-LAKI PADA PROSES TAWAR- MENAWAR DI PASAR SPLENDID, KOTA MALANG (KAJIAN SOSIOLINGUISTIK)

Main Author: Mahmudah, Hidayatul
Other Authors: Indonesian Language and Literature Education Study Program, Faculty of Cultural Sciences, Brawijaya University
Format: Article info application/pdf eJournal
Bahasa: eng
Terbitan: University of Brawijaya , 2020
Subjects:
Online Access: https://hastawiyata.ub.ac.id/index.php/hastawiyata/article/view/44
https://hastawiyata.ub.ac.id/index.php/hastawiyata/article/view/44/37
Daftar Isi:
  • The bargaining process is common in traditional markets, one of which is in the Malang Splendid Market, a market that consists of Flower Market and Animal Market. The language spoken in the bargaining process is inseparable from the social factors that influence the formation of speech patterns, one of which is gender. The focus of this research is to uncover differences in the speech of women and men in the bargaining process at the Splendid-Malang Market by looking at the linguistic markers contained in the speech, then related to language and gender theory. Linguistic markers targeted in this study are the use of modality and interjection. This research is a type of ethnographic research with SBLB / tapping data collection techniques. The analysis uses the equivalent method so that it can be known the contrast of male and female languages in the bargaining process. Based on the linguistic aspects of the results of this study; First, based on variations in the modality used, women use more modality variations than men. The tendency for this type of modality to be used is that female speakers are more likely to desire, obscure, permit / request, and allow. Male speakers are more inclined to the will / intent, exclusion, and order. Second, women use more variations in interjection than men. The differences in the language of men and women in the bargaining process at Splendid Market are; First, women are more active in the use of language in public spaces than men in the context of bargaining in traditional markets. Second, men show superior and competitive attitudes, while women are more cooperative or like solidarity and cooperation. Third, women are more focused on the affective function of communication than men, so women tend to respond well to their interlocutors.