"Dissecting the poisoned honey" Sexist Humor in Egypt: A linguistic analysis of sexism in Colloquial Cairene Arabic jokes

This paper attempts to shed light on sexism in Egyptian Internet jokes. It examines how language, as an institution largely controlled by men, is manipulated and used to disparage women in this discursive mode of humor. Through running a qualitative and quantitative analysis of 284 sexist internet j...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Heba Nayef, Mohamed El-Nashar
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2014-09-01
Series:Anàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura
Subjects:
Online Access:https://analisi.cat/article/view/2324
_version_ 1828731074454224896
author Heba Nayef
Mohamed El-Nashar
author_facet Heba Nayef
Mohamed El-Nashar
author_sort Heba Nayef
collection DOAJ
description This paper attempts to shed light on sexism in Egyptian Internet jokes. It examines how language, as an institution largely controlled by men, is manipulated and used to disparage women in this discursive mode of humor. Through running a qualitative and quantitative analysis of 284 sexist internet jokes, the study addressed three points; namely, the most frequently targeted category of women in sexist jokes; the most salient physical and personal attributes and finally the way sexist jokes is used to promote violence against women. The analysis has shown that the 'wife' is the category most ridiculed.  The data also revealed that in spite of the freedom in anonymity that the internet provides, personal attributes far outnumber the physical features.   The jokes conformed to the conservative nature of the society as derision of physical features was done through the use of general terms.  The analysis has shown that 'hatefulness' was the most highly criticised personal attribute, with 'stupidity' coming second.  It was also shown that under the guise of benign amusement, the effect of these jokes go beyond tolerating gender inequality to actually promoting physical violence against women. We conclude that in a patriarchal social system like that of Egypt, which already disparages women as the 'marked' and the 'different', such jokes should not be dismissed lightly as 'just jokes."
first_indexed 2024-04-12T17:39:52Z
format Article
id doaj.art-9761527cb296484e91a477fe19d4b52b
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 0211-2175
2340-5236
language Catalan
last_indexed 2024-04-12T17:39:52Z
publishDate 2014-09-01
publisher Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
record_format Article
series Anàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura
spelling doaj.art-9761527cb296484e91a477fe19d4b52b2022-12-22T03:22:50ZcatUniversitat Autònoma de BarcelonaAnàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura0211-21752340-52362014-09-015010.7238/a.v0i50.23241406"Dissecting the poisoned honey" Sexist Humor in Egypt: A linguistic analysis of sexism in Colloquial Cairene Arabic jokesHeba Nayef0Mohamed El-Nashar1Arab Academy for Science, Technology and Maritime Transport (AASTMT)Arab Academy for Science, Technology and Maritime Transport (AASTMT)This paper attempts to shed light on sexism in Egyptian Internet jokes. It examines how language, as an institution largely controlled by men, is manipulated and used to disparage women in this discursive mode of humor. Through running a qualitative and quantitative analysis of 284 sexist internet jokes, the study addressed three points; namely, the most frequently targeted category of women in sexist jokes; the most salient physical and personal attributes and finally the way sexist jokes is used to promote violence against women. The analysis has shown that the 'wife' is the category most ridiculed.  The data also revealed that in spite of the freedom in anonymity that the internet provides, personal attributes far outnumber the physical features.   The jokes conformed to the conservative nature of the society as derision of physical features was done through the use of general terms.  The analysis has shown that 'hatefulness' was the most highly criticised personal attribute, with 'stupidity' coming second.  It was also shown that under the guise of benign amusement, the effect of these jokes go beyond tolerating gender inequality to actually promoting physical violence against women. We conclude that in a patriarchal social system like that of Egypt, which already disparages women as the 'marked' and the 'different', such jokes should not be dismissed lightly as 'just jokes."https://analisi.cat/article/view/2324gender studieslinguistic sexismsexist jokessocial mediaEgyptian jokes
spellingShingle Heba Nayef
Mohamed El-Nashar
"Dissecting the poisoned honey" Sexist Humor in Egypt: A linguistic analysis of sexism in Colloquial Cairene Arabic jokes
Anàlisi: Quaderns de Comunicació i Cultura
gender studies
linguistic sexism
sexist jokes
social media
Egyptian jokes
title "Dissecting the poisoned honey" Sexist Humor in Egypt: A linguistic analysis of sexism in Colloquial Cairene Arabic jokes
title_full "Dissecting the poisoned honey" Sexist Humor in Egypt: A linguistic analysis of sexism in Colloquial Cairene Arabic jokes
title_fullStr "Dissecting the poisoned honey" Sexist Humor in Egypt: A linguistic analysis of sexism in Colloquial Cairene Arabic jokes
title_full_unstemmed "Dissecting the poisoned honey" Sexist Humor in Egypt: A linguistic analysis of sexism in Colloquial Cairene Arabic jokes
title_short "Dissecting the poisoned honey" Sexist Humor in Egypt: A linguistic analysis of sexism in Colloquial Cairene Arabic jokes
title_sort dissecting the poisoned honey sexist humor in egypt a linguistic analysis of sexism in colloquial cairene arabic jokes
topic gender studies
linguistic sexism
sexist jokes
social media
Egyptian jokes
url https://analisi.cat/article/view/2324
work_keys_str_mv AT hebanayef dissectingthepoisonedhoneysexisthumorinegyptalinguisticanalysisofsexismincolloquialcairenearabicjokes
AT mohamedelnashar dissectingthepoisonedhoneysexisthumorinegyptalinguisticanalysisofsexismincolloquialcairenearabicjokes