Multivocality of Saudi COVID-19 discourse in social media posts: a socio-semiotic multimodal perspective
This paper examines the discourse of COVID-19 (also known as coronavirus) in social media posts and argues that the mediated COVID-19 discourse in Saudi Arabia enacted a variety of voices and thematic discourses that cannot be fully evaluated without reference to the locality of the sociolingu...
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Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
2020
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Online Access: | http://journalarticle.ukm.my/16824/1/40904-143263-2-PB.pdf http://journalarticle.ukm.my/16824/ https://ejournal.ukm.my/gema/issue/view/1356 |
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Summary: | This paper examines the discourse of COVID-19 (also known as coronavirus) in social media
posts and argues that the mediated COVID-19 discourse in Saudi Arabia enacted a variety of
voices and thematic discourses that cannot be fully evaluated without reference to the locality
of the sociolinguistic semiotics of the speech community. It attempts to construct the various
non-verbal multivocalities in written and visual COVID-19 discourse present in 24 texts
obtained from Saudi social media platforms, namely WhatsApp and Twitter, during the
COVID-19 pandemic in the months of February, March and April, 2020. WhatsApp and
Twitter are chosen because they are considered the platforms most used by Saudis in Saudi
Arabia (GlobalWebIndex, 2020a, 2020b). The study employs a socio-semiotic approach to the
analysis of collected data following Kress & Van Leeuwen (1996), mediated discourse analysis
(Norris & Jones, 2005; Scollon, 2001) and systemic functional multimodal discourse analysis
(SF-MDA). The analysis aims at integrating the social semiotics and multimodal approaches
to better understand the dynamic Saudi discourse on COVID-19. The discourse on COVID-19
has revealed the dynamic multi-layered nature of governmental, individual and public voices
pertaining to COVID-19 multi-discoursal themes, novel multimodal resources and the specific
cultural semiotics of Saudi Arabia. The findings of the study revealed that the COVID-19
pandemic mediated discourse is relevant to the local speech community diglossic situation,
cultural semiotics, social norms and integrated national identity. |
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