Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/1755
Title: Redefining the Women's Space: A Frame Analysis of Thomas Ajayi’s Moremi the Courageous Queen
Authors: ALUYA, Isaiah
Keywords: Cognitive pragmatics
patriarchal formation
contextual frame models
Gitlin’s (1980) and Fairhurst & Sarr’s (1996) frame models
Issue Date: Dec-2023
Publisher: Research Nebula
Series/Report no.: Volume 7;No. 3
Abstract: This study, from a cognitive pragmatics perspective, examines how Thomas Ajayi’s Moremi demystifies male domination in a patriarchal formation. Findings unveil that the writer deploys three major contextual frame models on which other frames operate to attract readers' cognitive attention to the position of the discourse. The first frame model, conveys what exists” as a societal norm in a sociocultural context where men place women in a subordinate position. The second, instantiates “what happens” where the text through litanies of events downplays men's spurious ego and underscores female bravery with the emergence of a woman from a supposedly weak vessel to a societal liberator, and the third, enunciates “what matters” which foregrounds the writer’s perspective in redefining a dynamic structure that permeates men and women activities despite their biological differences. Within these larger frame models, one finds the use of interrogatives, allusion, contrast, and metaphor among others intertwining as windowing of attention to signal remarks that are stereotypically feminine. Fifteen texts are purposively selected using Gitlin’s (1980) and Fairhurst & Sarr’s (1996) frame models. Such conception of the discourse enhances readers' cognitive comprehension and interpretation of the discourse from the perspective of the author in redefining the woman’s space
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/1755
ISSN: 2277-8071
Appears in Collections:Research Articles

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