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He says, she says: gender differences in use of persuasive appeals, politeness strategies and grammatical mood across social power communication contexts

Mohd Noor Be, Nur Iylia and Abdul Latif @ Bapoo, Lilisuriani and Idrus, Azean Idruwani and Umu Aiman, Batrisyia (2025) He says, she says: gender differences in use of persuasive appeals, politeness strategies and grammatical mood across social power communication contexts. In: 5th International Conference on Islamic Contemporary Issue and Management (ICICM2025), 2025, Kangar, Perlis, Malaysia.

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Abstract

Persuasive speaking is a skill that requires speakers to strategically employ language to achieve desired outcomes. Although numerous studies have explored the delivery of persuasive messages, limited attention has been given to how non-native female and male speakers of English integrate politeness strategies and grammatical mood to construct Aristotelian logical, emotional, and credibility appeals when communicating with interlocutors of varying status within social contexts. Grounded in Aristotelian persuasive appeals, Brown and Levinson’s politeness theory, and Fahnestock’s classification of grammatical mood, this study investigated how non-native female and male speakers of English integrated politeness strategies and grammatical mood in persuasive appeals when addressing a friend and a boss within social English communication contexts. Quantitative and qualitative analyses were employed on the responses gathered through a Discourse Completion Task (DCT). The study involved 26 undergraduate international students from a higher education institution who attended a persuasive speaking skills workshop in Perlis, Malaysia. The findings revealed that when speaking to a friend, female participants used logical appeals with indicative moods and negative politeness strategies. When addressing a boss, they shifted to credibility appeals with indicative moods, accompanied by positive politeness strategies. Male participants, on the other hand, often employed credibility appeals with indicative moods and positive politeness strategies when communicating with a friend. When addressing a boss, emotional appeals are employed through both bald-on-record and off-record strategies, as well as imperative moods. While these results suggest that female and male speakers integrate distinct choices of politeness approaches and mood in different persuasive appeals when persuading in contexts given, the politeness strategies commonly employed by the male participants when speaking to a person of higher social status were rather unexpected. Some respondents’ choices of words also indicated that they were not sure what persuasion means. Future studies can investigate non-native English speakers’ understanding of persuasion and explore how ESL/EFL speakers use politeness strategies and mood to construct persuasive appeals in professional contexts.

Item Type: Proceeding Paper (Invited Papers)
Additional Information: 4117/124303
Uncontrolled Keywords: gender, Aristotelian persuasive appeals, politeness strategies, grammatical mood, social power
Subjects: P Language and Literature > P Philology. Linguistics > P87 Communication. Mass media
Kulliyyahs/Centres/Divisions/Institutes (Can select more than one option. Press CONTROL button): Kulliyyah of Sustainable Tourism and Contemporary Languages
Depositing User: Dr. Azean Idruwani Idrus
Date Deposited: 13 Nov 2025 15:13
Last Modified: 13 Nov 2025 16:08
URI: http://irep.iium.edu.my/id/eprint/124303

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