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Sula Malay's Hate Speech in the Sanana Jurisdiction: A Pragmatic Study

Hate speech – harsh or menacing words or writing that propagate bigotry based on sexual orientation, religion, ethnicity, or other comparable categories – is prevalent in nearly every language, including Indonesian. In fact, hate speech in Indonesian society is also spoken in its regional languages...

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Published in:Journal of language teaching and research 2024-11, Vol.15 (6), p.1941-1950
Main Authors: Taha, Mujahid, Febriningsih, Fida, Asfar, Dedy Ari, Zalmansyah, Achril, Muzammil, Ahmad Rabi'ul, Ajam, Ali, Lestari, Sri Ayu Budi, Zar'in, Firdaus, Rauf, Ramis, Gritantin, Lucia Arter Lintang
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container_end_page 1950
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1941
container_title Journal of language teaching and research
container_volume 15
creator Taha, Mujahid
Febriningsih, Fida
Asfar, Dedy Ari
Zalmansyah, Achril
Muzammil, Ahmad Rabi'ul
Ajam, Ali
Lestari, Sri Ayu Budi
Zar'in, Firdaus
Rauf, Ramis
Gritantin, Lucia Arter Lintang
description Hate speech – harsh or menacing words or writing that propagate bigotry based on sexual orientation, religion, ethnicity, or other comparable categories – is prevalent in nearly every language, including Indonesian. In fact, hate speech in Indonesian society is also spoken in its regional languages such as Sula Malay in North Maluku Province. This hate speech is of interest and should be studied because literal and metaphorical meanings, along with cultural context, are important for learning and understanding the vocabulary of a language. This study uses a qualitative descriptive approach to analyze hate speech in the Malay Sula language with data taken from the webpages of the Directory of Decisions of the Supreme Court of the Republic of Indonesia. The research population consisted of ten decisions, out of which five were selected as samples. Data analysis uses lexical-grammatical semantic theory, while pragmatic theory focuses on illocutionary speech acts, which is a tool of forensic linguistic analysis. Types of illocutionary speech include commissive speech in the form of threatening and insulting using curse words; directive speech in the form of commanding, which means to insult using curse words; and expressive speech in the form of regret that intends to inform by using insulting and cursing words. Another form of hate speech was found in the form of defamation.
doi_str_mv 10.17507/jltr.1506.19
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In fact, hate speech in Indonesian society is also spoken in its regional languages such as Sula Malay in North Maluku Province. This hate speech is of interest and should be studied because literal and metaphorical meanings, along with cultural context, are important for learning and understanding the vocabulary of a language. This study uses a qualitative descriptive approach to analyze hate speech in the Malay Sula language with data taken from the webpages of the Directory of Decisions of the Supreme Court of the Republic of Indonesia. The research population consisted of ten decisions, out of which five were selected as samples. Data analysis uses lexical-grammatical semantic theory, while pragmatic theory focuses on illocutionary speech acts, which is a tool of forensic linguistic analysis. 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identifier ISSN: 1798-4769
ispartof Journal of language teaching and research, 2024-11, Vol.15 (6), p.1941-1950
issn 1798-4769
2053-0684
language eng
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source Social Science Premium Collection (Proquest) (PQ_SDU_P3); Linguistics Collection; ProQuest One Literature; Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA)
subjects Blasphemy
Councils
Cultural factors
Defamation
Dialects
Ethnicity
Forensic linguistics
Hate speech
Imprisonment
Jurisdiction
Language
Language and culture
Lexical semantics
Linguistic research
Linguistics
Malay language
Malayan languages
Minority & ethnic groups
Obscenities
Pragmatics
Religion
Semantic analysis
Semantics
Sexuality
Social aspects
Social networks
Sociolinguistics
Speech acts
Verbal aggression
title Sula Malay's Hate Speech in the Sanana Jurisdiction: A Pragmatic Study
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