Gender as a sociolinguistic construct in anglophone magazine texts
Abstract
Anglophone magazines circulate social common sense through compact formats that merge advice, entertainment, and consumption. Gender emerges in this discourse as an organized set of expectations produced by recurring editorial routines. The article applies a discourse analytic model that traces gender meaning across address alignment, role naming, agency allocation, modality, evaluation, credibility cues, and limited multimodal anchoring. Texts are segmented into cover lines, headlines, leads, and body units, then coded at clause and paragraph level to capture stable patterning. Findings show denser obligation and self management scripts in lifestyle and intimacy sections, while capacity and entitlement are foregrounded in leadership, work, and competition. Authority is distributed unevenly: generalized expertise more often legitimizes body and relationship norms, whereas institutional proof more often validates status and achievement. The framework identifies where magazine language shifts from description to norm setting and where representation consolidates a hierarchy of roles across issues in mainstream titles.
Keywords:
Gender construction sociolinguistics magazine discourse Anglophone magazines identity positioning agency modality multimodalityReferences
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