2018
DOI: 10.3390/socsci7050081
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Driving Change on Twitter: A Corpus-Assisted Discourse Analysis of the Twitter Debates on the Saudi Ban on Women Driving

Abstract: This paper explores how Twitter has been used in the debate on women's right to drive in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA). The overarching aim of this investigation is to explain how gender roles and the relationship between the genders are navigated in these debates. For Saudi Arabian women, social media platforms such as Twitter provide a unique space to express opinions and highlight areas of concern in a way that they are unable to in any other public sphere. The exploration of the debate on women's right… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…According to Khamis (2013), social media has been an important and effective tool for women in the MENA region to raise their voices and educate women about their fundamental rights. For example, Altoaimy (2018) explored how Saudi women used Twitter to share their opinions on social issues in their country, particularly regarding Saudi women not being able to drive and the use of hashtags to raise awareness around driving rights. It is essential to point out that, to date, most of the literature focused on Muslim women’s social media activism has mainly focused on the MENA region (S.…”
Section: Literature Review: Muslim Women Sport and Digital Politicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Khamis (2013), social media has been an important and effective tool for women in the MENA region to raise their voices and educate women about their fundamental rights. For example, Altoaimy (2018) explored how Saudi women used Twitter to share their opinions on social issues in their country, particularly regarding Saudi women not being able to drive and the use of hashtags to raise awareness around driving rights. It is essential to point out that, to date, most of the literature focused on Muslim women’s social media activism has mainly focused on the MENA region (S.…”
Section: Literature Review: Muslim Women Sport and Digital Politicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A survey of the literature of corpus critical discourse studies (CDS for short) addressing gender issues, especially those related to women, in the Saudi context shows that few studies were conducted in this regard. Most of these studies focused on specific issues such as the ban on women driving (Alenazy, 2017;Aljarallah, 2017;Altoaimy, 2018), the representation of gender, social power, identity options and cultural elements in EFL textbooks in Saudi Arabia (Al Jumiah, 2016;Aljuaythin, 2018;Alshammri, 2017;Sulaimani, 2017), women-related posts on Saudi blogs (Al Maghlouth, 2017), and more specifically the representation of Saudi women in the British newspapers (Bashatah, 2017) and the Saudi newspapers (Al Hejin, 2012;Kurdi, 2014). In what follows, we report on the key findings of the studies which addressed the different topics related to Saudi women in journalistic discourse.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unlike previous studies on vision 2030 (e.g., Alharbi, 2018;Altoaimy, 2018;Bah, 2018;Daghestani et al, 2018;Dahim, 2018;Mitchell & Alfuraih, 2018), this study analyzed how women's empowerment was reproduced in the Saudi press as a matter of public and national concern, vis-à-vis vision 2030, which was largely neglected.…”
Section: Figure 2 a Collocation Analysis (Collocates And Frequency)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study concluded that an increase in gasoline prices contributed to short-term and intermediate-term decreases in on-road traffic accidents, injuries, and fatalities. Altoaimy (2018) explored the use of Twitter in the debate on women's right to drive in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The study investigated how gender roles and the relationship between the genders were navigated in such debates.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%