Officers and men and fallen heroes: The discursive construction of regimented masculinity in the Nigerian Army

  • God'sgift Ogban Uwen Department of English and Literary Studies, University of Calabar
  • Anthony Ebebe Eyang Department of English and Literary Studies, University of Calabar
Ariticle ID: 1058
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Keywords: regimented masculinity; masculine language practices; language ideology; theory of masculinity; Nigerian Army

Abstract

This paper examines the use of gendered language in the Nigerian Army’s community of practice through the application of insights from language ideology and theory of masculinity. Data were generated by means of participant observation and semi-structured interviews in a one-year fieldwork involving representative sample of 18 personnel of the 6 Battalion, Ibawa and 2 Brigade, Uyo, both in Akwa Ibom State in South-eastern Nigeria. The findings show that the Nigerian Army maintains institutional gendered language practices used among its personnel in regimented functions and social events. The gendered registers occur in the soldiers’ generic use of male address terms, adaptation to male-coded voice pattern in parades, masculinisation of Army’s workout songs, and the subordination of femininity in institutional associations, all combined to construct the regimented and performative masculinisation of the profession. This practice is observed to be informed by the numerical domination of men in the profession that was originally perceived as males’; a conception that has shaped the linguistic ideology and performance of the Nigerian Army to rehearse masculine orientations. It is however recommended that the Army’s language practices should capture modern ideals of a gender sensitive world that connect to the clamour for gender equality and equal social belonging through the inclusion of feminine linguistic markers in workplaces.

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Published
2023-09-28
How to Cite
Uwen, G. O., & Eyang, A. E. (2023). Officers and men and fallen heroes: The discursive construction of regimented masculinity in the Nigerian Army. Forum for Linguistic Studies (Transferred), 5(3), 1761. https://doi.org/10.59400/FLS.v5i3.1761
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Article