TY - JOUR
T1 - Class Identity Signaling through the Strategic Rebranding of Traditional Egyptian Food-Related Terms on Digital Platforms
AU - Altohami, Waheed M.A.
AU - Atia Omar, Abdulfattah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Librairie du Liban Publishers. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - This study investigates the way re-branding traditional Egyptian food-related terms is strategically used by an emerging socio-economic class to assert their class identity in digital milieus. Specifically, it analyzes the strategies employed for the Englishization and hybridization of culinary culture and examines the underlying socio-cultural motivations and dynamics driving such an innovative linguistic practice. Drawing on insights from sociolinguistics and sociology, we analyzed two data sets collected by means of an online survey and semi-structured interviews. Findings revealed that there is an emerging exclusive socio-economic class that manifests itself through specific lexical preferences based on diverse types of lexical borrowings. Additionally, the Englishization of traditional Egyptian food-related terms partially drove the emerging class’s rejection of social equality and solidarity with collective socio-cultural Egyptian identity. Such a class division, primarily initiated on digital platforms, was found to be motivated by complex factors at play, including age, gender, educational level, lifestyle, technology usage, etc. The findings of this study have implications for understanding the intersection of language, class identity, and technology in contemporary Egyptian society.
AB - This study investigates the way re-branding traditional Egyptian food-related terms is strategically used by an emerging socio-economic class to assert their class identity in digital milieus. Specifically, it analyzes the strategies employed for the Englishization and hybridization of culinary culture and examines the underlying socio-cultural motivations and dynamics driving such an innovative linguistic practice. Drawing on insights from sociolinguistics and sociology, we analyzed two data sets collected by means of an online survey and semi-structured interviews. Findings revealed that there is an emerging exclusive socio-economic class that manifests itself through specific lexical preferences based on diverse types of lexical borrowings. Additionally, the Englishization of traditional Egyptian food-related terms partially drove the emerging class’s rejection of social equality and solidarity with collective socio-cultural Egyptian identity. Such a class division, primarily initiated on digital platforms, was found to be motivated by complex factors at play, including age, gender, educational level, lifestyle, technology usage, etc. The findings of this study have implications for understanding the intersection of language, class identity, and technology in contemporary Egyptian society.
KW - Egyptian Arabic
KW - Englishization
KW - class identity
KW - culinary culture
KW - lexical borrowing
KW - rebranding
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85214429298&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.33806/ijaes.v25i1.597
DO - 10.33806/ijaes.v25i1.597
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85214429298
SN - 1680-0982
VL - 25
SP - 125
EP - 152
JO - International Journal of Arabic-English Studies
JF - International Journal of Arabic-English Studies
IS - 1
ER -