A Psychological Exegesis of Displacement in Bapsi Sidhwa's Novel The Bride: A Sociolinguistic Analysis
This reports the psychological perspective of displacement in the English Pakistani novel The Bride (also published as The Pakistani Bride), written by a Pakistani American novelist Bapsi Sidhwa. This is a sociolinguistic study with the employment of Close Reading (CR) and Systematic Functional Linguistics (SFL). The study involves social, psychological and semantic aspects with the aim to present the psychological impact of displacement on the personal and social life of the characters. Close-Reading provides the analysis of the novel and the author. Systematic Functional Linguistics provides context and semantics as tools to analyze the historical and conceptual background of the novel. The findings of the study present mixed results, supporting the supposition that displacement affects the psychological state of the characters and disturbs their individual functionality. It partially proves that their social functionality is equally affected. It may be because people are more careful in playing their social roles.
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Displacement, Psychological, Sociolinguistic, Perspective, Functionality
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(1) Hashim Khan
Head, Department of English & General Subjects, Saudi Japanese Automobile High Institute, Jeddah.
(2) Khalid Azim Khan
Assistant Professor, Deanship of University Development and Quality Assurance, Umm Al-Qura University, Makkah.
(3) Muhammad Umer
Assistant Professor, Department of English, Islamia College University, Peshawar, KP, Pakistan.
A Sociolinguistic Study of Taboos and Euphemisms Surrounding Pakistani Females' Daily Issues
This research paper is an endeavor to delineate various linguistic taboos about women's physiology with a focus on both the categories and functions of taboos in Pakistani society. The aim is to bring forth myriad euphemistic expressions employed in print media. The paper contests that taboos are moderated at the expanse of society's cultural and religious norms.It also offers a rationale behind the popular use of euphemistic expressions for Pakistani Females' daily issues. Allan and Burridge's (2006) theoretical framework furnished the basic framework for the analysis of different euphemistic expressions. The data for the study comprises thirteen different English newspaper articles published in the last six years (2016-2021). The data analysis revealed that euphemisms could connote multiple shades of meaning ranging from shame, disgust, exasperation, and upliftment. It was established that euphemisms operate along dysphemism and orthophemisminterchangeably depending on the context in which they appeared.
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Euphemism, Gender Studies, Orthophemism, Sociolinguistics, Taboo
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(1) Ayesha Izhar Chaudhri
Lecturer, University of Sargodha, Sargodha, Punjab, Pakistan
(2) Tazanfal Tehseem
Assistant Professor, University of Sargodha, Sargodha, Punjab, Pakistan
(3) Barirah Nazir
Lecturer, University of Sargodha, Sargodha, Punjab, Pakistan.