Secretarial profession imaginary in flower shops online advertisements posted on “Secretary's Day”
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33228/scribes.2020.v1.10635Abstract
The secretarial profession is marked in our society by some crystallized conceptions, many of them reinforcing old practices linked to the professional exercise. Aiming to understand the constitution of these conceptions, in the discursive scope, we propose this study. This article is focused in analyzing the socio discursive imaginary (Charaudeau, 2011) built regarding the secretarial profession in online advertisements posted on the “Secretary's Day” (September 30th) in 2012 by three flower shops. As a method of analysis, we use the Discourse Analysis, which allows the researcher to seize the meaning effects of language materiality – in our work case, verb-iconic. For Orlandi (2012), Discourse Analysis does not deal with language, but with discourse, which implies the symbolic of speech and considers the general social work constitutive of a man and his history. Our theoretical contribution included the studies of Nonato Júnior (2009) and Sabino and Rocha (2004) regarding the secretarial profession, Charaudeau (2011) and Reis (2012), in the matter of socio discursive imaginary, and Farina (1990) and Guimarães (2004) regarding the meanings evoked by colors. From the analysis undertaken, it was possible to understand how the secretarial profession was represented on its commemorative date in the listed corpus, which demonstrated that, on one hand, it points to a contemporary representation of the profession, however, on the other hand, there are still recovered crystallized imaginary related to the occupation.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Published authors agree on the following items:
a. Authors keep copyright ownership whilst ceding to SCRIBES the right to a first publication. The material is also simultaneously licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported Licence, which allows its publication with mutual recognition of authorship and initial publication through SCRIBES.
b. Authors are authorised to engage in third-party contracts independently, as long as they are pursuing a non-exclusive publication of the article originally published in this journal, such as having it appended to an institutional repository or included in a book as a chapter. Authorship and original publication by SCRIBES must still be acknowledged.
c. Authors have permission to and are encouraged to publish their research online, such as in institutional repositories or in their own personal web pages. They are allowed to do that before or after the editorial process, once it inspires any opportunistic alterations to be considered during the aforementioned process, and increase the content’s impact and value as a quotable work (read more on The Effect of Free Access).