Laila Nasr
Ms Dania Adra
English 203
September 26, 2015
The 5 Interpretations of “Brand Malala”
Carole Ann
Grayson, in her text “Brand Malala”,
attacks the Western and specifically UK government’s favouritism of Malala
Yousafzai, in attempts to bring to light its hidden motives. The social
implication this has is that by heavily focusing on Malala, they are
deprioritising the issue of gender inequality in the UK, whilst focusing more
on developing countries such as Pakistan. Grayson explicitly states the
fundamental issue of society: “Exploitation of women whether emotionally,
physically, financially is so ingrained in our society” – the text is not only
about the exploitation of Malala by the media, but of a much larger issue;
gender injustice (Grayson 594). By alluding to Rigoberta Menchu, Grayson
discusses how history can repeat itself and seems to depict a similar path for
Malala; becoming a Nobel prize nominee (Grayson 596). Similarly, Grayson’s
choice of diction in the 15th paragraph encompasses a greater issue,
the use of the phrase “stage management behind the scenes” allows her readers
to picture a movie theatre or a play, where Malala is the puppet and the media,
politicians, and PR company are moving the strings to make a show (Grayson 596).
This form of social criticism is key for Grayson to voice her thoughts that
truly allow her readers to ponder on current events in the news.
By using
business-related jargon, Grayson emphasises the pure exploitation of the young
Pakistani girl in the media. Terms such as “commodity”, “profitable”, and “marketable”
all point in the direction that Grayson is attempting to depict (Grayson
593-594). Through repetition and jargon, the writer expresses her emotional
perspective, with attempts at projecting an objective view. This is highlighted
by Grayson’s use of references and personal experiences with the media. The
title of the blogpost itself, “Brand
Malala”, conveys the dehumanisation that Malala is being faced with; she is
merely a product that the West is promoting to fit their campaigns. Moreover, the
claim that Grayson makes about Malala’s father and the BBC working together to promote
her “diary for public consumption” accentuates the emotional appeal of this
blogpost (Grayson 595).
The rhetorical
perspective of this text is expressed is a few ways, firstly the text type is a
blogpost and Grayson’s style of writing would suggest that this in an expository
piece. Secondly, the blog is multimodal – incorporates both text and image – which
conveys the immediacy of the topic that is at hand; images are easier and
faster to process and thus add to the purpose of the blogpost. Lastly, Grayson’s
cynical tone in the rhetorical questions she poses illustrate her perspective
on the issue; how the media is selective to suit their agendas. In addition,
the use of an anecdote to convey her thoughts on the UK’s former prime minister
is an attention grabbing one – “in the valley of the blind, the one-eyed ‘man’
is king” (Grayson 594). This suggests that he seems to be suffering from an
internal conflict, where he refused to aid the widows in the UK itself but was
an “avid supporter” of Malala’s case (Grayson 594).
From an ethical
perspective, the blogpost “Brand Malala”
is an effective mean of illustrating the morals and values that today’s
societies hold. Grayson claims that there are “double standards on how
terrorism is reported” depending on whether it occurred in the West or the East
(Grayson 593). She goes on to state that “all violence must be condemned”;
regardless of location, victims, and especially gender (Grayson 594). Grayson
in this text is not claiming that the public should dismiss Malala and what she
advocates for, on the contrary, she mentions that “as an intelligent young role
model”, Malala’s voice has reached places and will continue to do so as she “[knuckles]
down” doors of gender injustice and specifically those for education (Grayson
598).
The final
perspective this text upholds is the logical perspective, Grayson utilises
several examples to back up her claims around this text, whilst using
sufficient quotations from reliable sources to appeal to her readers’ logos.
Artist Jonathon Rao shares his similar opinion about Malala being a “pawn in a
bigger game” and was being unrightfully taken advantage of (Grayson 595).
Referring back to Gordon Brown, who ignored a dying man’s request to solve the everlasting
issue of gender justice, it is clear that society picks certain parts of issues
that aid their personal political agendas and stray from the whole truth
(Grayson 595).
Works Cited:
Grayson,
Carol Anne. ""Brand Malala": Western Exploitation of a Schoolgirl."
Blog post. N.p., 9 Oct. 2013. Web. 26 Sept. 2015.
social: great (good intext citation, but if you use authors name in text dont mention it in citation) (work cited all wrong)
ReplyDeleteemotional: what emotion does she express
rhetorical: it is argumentative, and she doesnt express internal conflict at all she has a clear voice
logical: you can say more about her conclusions
ethical: its ok, you get confused about the point of malala's exploitation