Department of English
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Browsing Department of English by Author "Unuabonah, Foluke"
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- ItemAspects of Non-Verbal Communication in Adichie's Purple Hibiscus(Ibadan Journal of English Studies, 2009) Unuabonah, Foluke
- ItemContextual Beliefs in Doctor-pregnant Woman (DPW) Conversational Interactions in Selected Hospitals in Ibadan(Oye: Journal of Arts, 2011) Unuabonah, Foluke
- ItemDiscourse Acts in Antenatal Clinic Literacy Classroom in South-Western Nigeria(LinguistikOnline, 2007) Unuabonah, FolukeThis study examines the organization of discourse in antenatal classrooms in south-western Nigeria. Antenatal literacy classrooms are classes organized in hospitals and health centres for pregnant women to intimate them with the necessary health information needed in pregnancy. The data for this study were randomly selected from series of data recorded during some antenatal classes in some selected hospitals in Ile-Ife and its environs, all in south-western Nigeria. The data consist of tape recordings of the classroom sessions and observational notes. The study reveals that three categories of discourse act were most prominent in the data – informative, elicitation and directive. This shows that the antenatal educators were more active in the classes than the students. They maximized the use of their power in discourse, which gives them the [+ HIGHER] role. They therefore had the privilege to talk while the mothers listened. This places the pregnant women at the disadvantage of being passive learners, who cannot see the knowledge being passed across beyond the context of the class. Despite that they have access to information, they are not adequately empowered to influence the society with what they are being exposed to. Their perception of their role in the discourse was that of listeners. The findings have significant implications for health literacy programmes in Nigeria. It clearly shows that health literacy programmes, as we have observed in antenatal classrooms exist only as an aspect of functional health literacy – the aspect that recognizes that pregnant women need to know about their health by listening to experts. This makes the practice, as it is essentially transactional. The study concludes that for antenatal classrooms to achieve their goal of health security of pregnant women and their foetus, they have to be more interactive. There must be a departure from the lecture method used now to a method that actually involves the mothers.
- ItemEthnography of Communication in Doctor-pregnant Woman Conversations in Selected Hospitals in Ibadan, Nigeria(Papers in Language and Linguistics, 2008) Unuabonah, FolukeThis paper analyses the conversations of doctor-pregnant woman interactions from the perspective of ethnography of communication. The data were collected from randomly selected consultations between doctors and pregnant women from a state-owned and private-owned hospital in Ibadan, Nigeria. The selection of the hospitals was based on a stratified sampling method of the hospitals in Ibadan. The conversations were tape recorded and transcribed. The analyses reveal that the ends of conversations between doctors and pregnant women include the need to safeguard the health of the mother and fetus, ensure a safe delivery, prescribe drugs and reassure the pregnant women about certain abnormalities they experience during the period. The analyses also reveal that doctors control the discourse by asking more questions than the pregnant women and that the typical act sequence of doctor-pregnant woman conversation follows the structure of greetings, diagnosis, inquiry, complaints, clarification, follow-up and treatment. The analysis of the doctor-pregnant woman conversational interaction from the perspective of ethnography of communication reveals how the interactants make sense of the conversations.
- ItemIllocutionary Acts in Doctor-pregnant Woman (DPW) Conversations in Selected Hospitals in Ibadan(Lagos Papers in English Studies, 2010) Unuabonah, Foluke
- ItemLexical Cohesive Devices in Chimamanda Adichie's Purple Hibiscus(Ife Studies in English Language, 2008) Unuabonah, Foluke
- ItemThe Use of Kinesics as a Non-Verbal mode in Chimamanda Adichie’s Purple Hibiscus(Humanities Review Journal, 2013) Unuabonah, FolukeAlthough researchers have studied silence as a form of nonverbal communication in Adichie’s Purple Hibiscus, little attention has been paid to other aspects of nonverbal communication in the novel. This paper explores kinesics in Chimamanda Adichie’s Purple Hibiscus. Different aspects of kinesics found in the text include gestures, haptics, and postures and these have been effectively used by the writer to project the characters in the novel. The analysis reveals that the functions of these kinetic variables include supplementing, reinforcing and regulating verbal exchanges, revealing emotional states/personality traits, and indicating likes/dislikes of individuals/situations/ideas. The study gives the reader an insight into the characters and the relationships they have with one another in the novel.