Towards Applying Socio-Historical Semiotic Approach
A Cross-Cultural Multi-modal Qualitative Study on Gender Representation and Media Discourse focusing on Egypt and Japan
by
Book Details
About the Book
Gender representation is a critical element of culture that is a key to understanding any society. ‘Media’ is an element closely related to gender representation. The terms ‘gender’ and ‘media’ are modern, but the concepts and symbols associated with them are not new. This book explores these ideas through a cross-cultural study of gender representation in Egypt and Japan. The book presents Socio-historical Semiotic approach. First, the book analyses modern media discourses related to the issue of female circumcision. Then, considering media from the past, the book deals with gender representation in two examples of popular literature (The Tale of the Heike and Sīrat al-Amīrah Dhāt al-Himmah. These two literary works belong to the literature of war and include a historical character, thus placing them in realist literature. The book explores the two cases within their historical and cultural contexts, tracing how past and present gendered discourse systems and dynamics are similar or dissimilar within different contexts. The book aims to clarify the mechanisms and factors that shape gender representation discourses in the past and the present, as well as how these mechanisms and factors intersect. Moreover, the book seeks to deduce the semiotic sources that reflect these mechanisms and factors to contribute to developing a socio-historical semiotic analysis.
About the Author
The author has a passion for Japanese language, literature, and culture, complemented by years of academic achievement and international experience. • She joined the International Student exchange program at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies (2002–2003). • She earned her Bachelor’s degree in Japanese Language and Literature from Cairo University in 2004, graduating with honors. • She completed her Master’s degree in Comparative Literature at Cairo University in 2017 with a thesis titled "Relationship Between Heroism Image and Supernatural Power in Medieval Literature – A Comparative Study of 'Yoshitsune Legend' and 'The Tale of Beni Hilal'". • obtained Ph.D. degree from Nagoya University's School of Humanities- Comparative Cultural anthropology. • Researcher at Nagoya University Graduate School of Humanities from November 2022 to March 2024. • Junior Research Fellow at the Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa (AA-ken), Tokyo University of Foreign Studies (TUFS), from April 2024 till now.