The Use of Stereotypes within South African Television Car Advertising using the German Language: A Multimodal Social Semiotic Approach.

Abstract

The use of German is a rare phenomenon in the South African television car advertising context, and thus seems to have a specific purpose. In this paper, through a social semiotic approach, we examine the use and function of German and South African national, gender and occupational stereotypes portrayed within SA car television advertisements that use the German language. It highlights how consumers use stereotypes to orientate themselves in a complex environment. We argue that the understanding of how stereotypes are conveyed through language use in combination with the visual portrayal of social actors presents insights into what German car advertising agencies may consider effective and appropriate advertising.

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Author Biographies

Sasha-Lee Schafli, Rhodes University
Sasha-Lee Schafli is currently studying her MA Degree at Rhodes University in the German Studies Section with co-supervision from the Linguistics department. Her fields of research include sociolinguistics, cultural studies, applied linguistics, teaching and learning of German as a Foreign Language, social semiotics, psycholinguistics, systemic functional linguistics and multimodality.
Undine Susanne Weber, Rhodes University
Undine Weber is Head of the School of Languages and Literatures and a Senior Lecturer of German Studies at Rhodes University. Her research interests are the scholarship of teaching and learning, German literature of the 20th century, cultural studies and translation.
Published
2023-12-25
How to Cite
Schafli, S.-L., & Weber, U. S. (2023). The Use of Stereotypes within South African Television Car Advertising using the German Language: A Multimodal Social Semiotic Approach. Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus, 66(1), 229-251. https://doi.org/10.5842/66-1-828
Section
Articles