This seminar is presented by the ANU Korea Institute. 

This presentation combines approaches from multimodal discourse analysis, gesture studies and impoliteness research to analyse how a common hand shape was constructed as an offensive gesture in South Korea in 2021 and became a locus for anti-feminist discourse. The hand movement in question is a 'precision grip' gesture whereby the thumb and index finger are pursed together to represent holding a small object. This gesture was perceived by some as mocking men for the size of their genitals, and became a controversial emblem associated with misandry (i.e., man hating).

Dr Brown's gestural analysis shows that men constructed their offensive stances around a large swathe of handshapes, not all of which were actually precision grip gestures. Nonetheless, the conservative media ratified men’s claims that the images were intentional and represented misandry. The results speak to the discursive nature of impoliteness and advances our understanding of 'taking offense' as a social action in populist, multimodal and post-digital discourses.


SPEAKER:
Dr Lucien Brown 
Korea Foundation Associate Professor in Korean Studies
School of Languages, Literatures, Cultures and Linguistics
Monash University 

Refreshments provided at the seminar. 

Event Speakers

Dr Lucien Brown

Dr Lucien Brown

Dr Lucien Brown is the Korea Foundation Associate Professor in Korean Studies in the School of Languages, Literatures, Cultures and Linguistics at Monash University. He is an applied linguist who carries out research in two interrelated fields: politeness research and socio-cultural language learning/teaching. 

Seminar

Details

Date

Location

McDonald Room, Menzies Library, ANU

Cost

Free

Related academic area

Event speakers

Dr Lucien Brown

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