Research Title | Feminist Stylistic Analysis of Princess Animated Films |
Researcher(s) | ERWIN L. OAMIL, JAREASON C. FABRE |
Research Category | Study |
Research Status | on-going |
Duration | Jan 01, 2023 to Dec 31, 2023 |
Commodity | |
Research Site(s) | |
Source of Fund(s) | |
Brief Description | |
Expected Output | Social Science research is among MMSU’s priority research & development agenda. The proposed research is categorized as a social science research (both in languages and literature) and gender research which is part of the gender-responsive research program in compliance to CMO No. 1 s. 2015. It also attempts to produce an instructional material which can be used in the courses in languages, linguistics, literature, and stylistics. The proposed study is expected to contribute in the growing knowledge on stylistics, particularly in Feminist Stylistic Analysis, that is employed on film. The study will attempt to bridge the gap of textual feminist stylistics analysis to include films. To achieve this, the researcher will design a feminist stylistic film (FSF) toolkit that will allow a three-part interplaying analysis. The Character Analysis will be guided by the concepts of Mills’ Feminist Stylistic Analysis and Ferguson’s Images of Women. In the Structure Analysis, the researcher will employ concepts from Propp’s Morphology of the Folktale and Campbell’s Monomyth. Meanwhile, the Symbolic Analysis will be grounded on Barthes’ Semiotic Theory. The FSF toolkit will be an innovation in feminist stylistics research which can be used in future studies. It is also aimed at theory building and analysis model-development particularly on the fields of Feminism, Literary Criticism, Discourse Analysis, and Stylistics. After completion, the study will yield a publishable journal for future paper international presentation and publication in reputable and peer-reviewed research journal. It will also serve as an instructional material in the courses such as but not limited to Stylistics and Emerging and Popular Literatures. |
Abstract | Not Available |