"Mee siam mai hum" : style-shifting and code-mixing in election rallies

This paper discusses the linguistic practices of Singaporean political leaders, Lee Hsien Loong and Pritam Singh. Specifically, it aims to look at their style-shifting and code-mixing strategies when they are performing election rally speeches. This will provide insight into how a political leader n...

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Main Author: Teoh, Yong Qin
Other Authors: Ivan Panović
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138318
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1383182020-05-02T07:44:18Z "Mee siam mai hum" : style-shifting and code-mixing in election rallies Teoh, Yong Qin Ivan Panović School of Humanities ivan@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Linguistics::Discourse analysis This paper discusses the linguistic practices of Singaporean political leaders, Lee Hsien Loong and Pritam Singh. Specifically, it aims to look at their style-shifting and code-mixing strategies when they are performing election rally speeches. This will provide insight into how a political leader negotiates his identity in a communication site where his identity is highly correlated to his success. In similar study by Khoo (2015), it was shown that language variation is a strategy used by opposition political party members to portray themselves as ‘not too elite like the PAP , but not too uneducated’. While this study adopts a similar approach, it will instead examine speech data from Lee and Singh from the 2015 general election rallies. As they have different political allegiances, analysing their discourses will provide understanding on whether opposing politicians vary their language differently. Despite Khoo’s (2015) conclusions about the opposition’s linguistic strategies, the results in this study contradicted that. Singh, the opposition’s current leader, style-shifted between standard English and Singlish only once in approximately 52 minutes of speech. His speech was otherwise marked by a lack of variation. Conversely, Lee displayed a propensity for language variation as he style-shifted several times and in a range of situations. He occasionally code-mixed too. These had the effect of accentuating his solidarity with the people and leadership capability simultaneously. Bachelor of Arts in Linguistics and Multilingual Studies 2020-05-02T07:44:18Z 2020-05-02T07:44:18Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138318 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Linguistics::Discourse analysis
spellingShingle Humanities::Linguistics::Discourse analysis
Teoh, Yong Qin
"Mee siam mai hum" : style-shifting and code-mixing in election rallies
description This paper discusses the linguistic practices of Singaporean political leaders, Lee Hsien Loong and Pritam Singh. Specifically, it aims to look at their style-shifting and code-mixing strategies when they are performing election rally speeches. This will provide insight into how a political leader negotiates his identity in a communication site where his identity is highly correlated to his success. In similar study by Khoo (2015), it was shown that language variation is a strategy used by opposition political party members to portray themselves as ‘not too elite like the PAP , but not too uneducated’. While this study adopts a similar approach, it will instead examine speech data from Lee and Singh from the 2015 general election rallies. As they have different political allegiances, analysing their discourses will provide understanding on whether opposing politicians vary their language differently. Despite Khoo’s (2015) conclusions about the opposition’s linguistic strategies, the results in this study contradicted that. Singh, the opposition’s current leader, style-shifted between standard English and Singlish only once in approximately 52 minutes of speech. His speech was otherwise marked by a lack of variation. Conversely, Lee displayed a propensity for language variation as he style-shifted several times and in a range of situations. He occasionally code-mixed too. These had the effect of accentuating his solidarity with the people and leadership capability simultaneously.
author2 Ivan Panović
author_facet Ivan Panović
Teoh, Yong Qin
format Final Year Project
author Teoh, Yong Qin
author_sort Teoh, Yong Qin
title "Mee siam mai hum" : style-shifting and code-mixing in election rallies
title_short "Mee siam mai hum" : style-shifting and code-mixing in election rallies
title_full "Mee siam mai hum" : style-shifting and code-mixing in election rallies
title_fullStr "Mee siam mai hum" : style-shifting and code-mixing in election rallies
title_full_unstemmed "Mee siam mai hum" : style-shifting and code-mixing in election rallies
title_sort "mee siam mai hum" : style-shifting and code-mixing in election rallies
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/138318
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