1.Introduction
2. Structural properties
2.1 Grammatical gender
2.2 Gender agreement
2.3 The morphological structure of personal nouns
2.3.1 Derivation
2.3.2 Compounding
3. The lexical representation of women and men
4. Gender and reference
4.1 Gender-specific reference and agreement conflicts
4.2 Gender-indefinite reference and generic masculines
4.3 The endearing use of the masculine gender
4.4 Summary
5. The interpretation of generic masculines: Empirical evidence
5.1 Personal nouns with specific reference
5.2 Personal nouns with more generic reference
5.3 Metalinguistic test
6. Linguistic gender studies in Russia
6.1 Proverbs and idioms
6.1.1 The androcentric perspective
6.1.2 Ženskij golos – ‘The female voice’
6.1.3 ‘Woman/wife’
6.1.4 ‘Mother’
6.1.5 The “pseudo-female” perspective
6.2 Obscene expressions – a male domain?
7.Language politics
8.Suggestions for future research
Notes
References
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2020. “Please Don’t Gender Me!” Strategies for Inclusive Language Instruction in a Gender-Diverse Campus Community. In Diversity and Decolonization in German Studies, ► pp. 269 ff.
Steriopolo, Olga
2018. Two syntactic positions of grammatical gender. Yearbook of the Poznan Linguistic Meeting 4:1 ► pp. 125 ff.
Steriopolo, Olga
2021. Grammatical gender reversals: A morphosyntactic and sociopragmatic analysis. Open Linguistics 7:1 ► pp. 136 ff.
Harel-Shalev, Ayelet & Shir Daphna-Tekoah
2016. Bringing Women’s Voices Back In: Conducting Narrative Analysis in IR. International Studies Review 18:2 ► pp. 171 ff.
2015. The Interaction of Morphological and Stereotypical Gender Information in Russian. Frontiers in Psychology 6
Ergun, Emek
2010. Bridging Across Feminist Translation and Sociolinguistics. Language and Linguistics Compass 4:5 ► pp. 307 ff.
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