This article investigates how the process of coming out as lesbian, gay or bisexual (LGB) is represented both on internet sites and in paper pamphlets offering advice. The analysis of the texts makes use of script formulation theory, as developed by Edwards (1994, 1995, 1997, 2004), and reveals a degree of interdiscursivity between the texts, in that coming out is scripted with a high level of homogeneity. A number of different scripts relating to coming out are identified and consideration is given to the rhetorical functions performed by these particular scripts. It is argued that the selection, elaboration, support and opposition of particular scripts formulates coming out as a rational, positive and emancipatory action for an LGB individual to undertake. Moreover, the writers present coming out as an ordered and predictable event, which functions to persuade the reader that coming out is an achievable and attainable objective.
2019. Discursive shifts associated with coming out: A corpus‐based analysis of news reports about Ricky Martin. Journal of Sociolinguistics 23:3 ► pp. 284 ff.
Motschenbacher, Heiko
2021. Corpus-Based Considerations on Critical Literacy in ELT: The Linguistic Representation of Ricky Martin in the News Media. In Intersectional Perspectives on LGBTQ+ Issues in Modern Language Teaching and Learning, ► pp. 217 ff.
Bannink, Anne & Djoeke Wentink
2015. ‘I need to confess something’: Coming out on national television. Discourse & Communication 9:5 ► pp. 535 ff.
Turner, Georgina
2015. ‘A REAL LESBIAN WOULDN'T TOUCH A BISEXUAL WITH A BARGEPOLE'. Critical Discourse Studies 12:2 ► pp. 139 ff.
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