Researcher: Tamadhur Khudhair Al-Qayyim
Ministry of Education - General Directorate of Education in Babil
This paper explores how language acts as a means of symbolic control in Jane Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice, bringing into focus its role in const-ructing and reinforcing gender ideology and social hierarchy. Drawing on an eclectic pragma-discursive modal, the analysis integrates pragmatic theories (speech acts, politeness strategies, conversational implicature) with insights from critical discourse approaches (ideology, power, and social hierarchy ana-lysis) to reveal how power relations are deviously negotiated in conversational strategies. Over examining selected conversational extracts, involving key characters -Lady Catherine, and Mr. Darcy- the study shows symbolic control in the novel is not applied by overt control but in subtle discursive performs as indirectness, critical language, and socially authorized norms of politeness, that legitimize dominance and covering its coercive force. The findings specify that male and upper-class characters regularly use language to reinforce and natura-lize male and class-based norms, while females negotiate, resist, or strategically obey these constraints. The study concludes that Austen’s novel sustains social order via ideological language and alongside offering spaces for discursive resistance mostly through dialogic conflict between characters.
الكلمات المفتاحية
Symbolic Control, Pragma-Discursive Analysis, Gender Ideology, Class Hierarchy,الصفحات: 165-179