On the road to Mecca: Branding discourses and national identity on coffee shop signage.

Commercial branding stands as a discursive and cultural facet of the contemporary global era where competing brands construct their own identities. From a discourse perspective, a brand is discursively constructed on commercial signs. Accordingly, this study examines the interplay between coffee sho...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Abduljalil Nasr Hazaea, Mutahar Qassem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0309829
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1823864128571179008
author Abduljalil Nasr Hazaea
Mutahar Qassem
author_facet Abduljalil Nasr Hazaea
Mutahar Qassem
author_sort Abduljalil Nasr Hazaea
collection DOAJ
description Commercial branding stands as a discursive and cultural facet of the contemporary global era where competing brands construct their own identities. From a discourse perspective, a brand is discursively constructed on commercial signs. Accordingly, this study examines the interplay between coffee shop branding and national identity in Saudi Arabia. In so doing, the study investigates the competing branding discourses associated with coffee as well as the space given to national identity. To achieve this task, the study developed a conceptual framework grounded on critical discourse analysis (CDA) and linguistic landscape (LL). The data consists of 88 commercial signs of coffee shops collected by driving on a road from Najran to Mecca, Saudi Arabia. The research site was then verified through Google Maps. The data built a communicative event for an empirical mixed-method research design. CDA linguistic and multimodal toolbox was utilized. The analysis showed that three names of coffee are found on the road to Mecca: qahwa (Arabic), coffee (English), and kufi (transliteration). With these names, four discourse are in competition. For globalization, English-Arabic glocal discourse (34%), and English global discourse (8%) are competing to construct coffee branding. For national identity, Arabic local discourse (42%) and Arabic-English glocal discourse (16%) are associated with qahwa; something that gives substantial space (58%) for national identity. These findings enhance our understanding of the linguistic and multimodal dimensions of globalized spaces and their discursive construction of branding at the local scale of globalization. The study recommends further research and suggests some cultural and pedagogical implications for authorities, translation, bilingual awareness, teaching, and learning.
format Article
id doaj-art-f421fa1898834fb9a1e8baa31efdca7b
institution Kabale University
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-f421fa1898834fb9a1e8baa31efdca7b2025-02-09T05:30:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01202e030982910.1371/journal.pone.0309829On the road to Mecca: Branding discourses and national identity on coffee shop signage.Abduljalil Nasr HazaeaMutahar QassemCommercial branding stands as a discursive and cultural facet of the contemporary global era where competing brands construct their own identities. From a discourse perspective, a brand is discursively constructed on commercial signs. Accordingly, this study examines the interplay between coffee shop branding and national identity in Saudi Arabia. In so doing, the study investigates the competing branding discourses associated with coffee as well as the space given to national identity. To achieve this task, the study developed a conceptual framework grounded on critical discourse analysis (CDA) and linguistic landscape (LL). The data consists of 88 commercial signs of coffee shops collected by driving on a road from Najran to Mecca, Saudi Arabia. The research site was then verified through Google Maps. The data built a communicative event for an empirical mixed-method research design. CDA linguistic and multimodal toolbox was utilized. The analysis showed that three names of coffee are found on the road to Mecca: qahwa (Arabic), coffee (English), and kufi (transliteration). With these names, four discourse are in competition. For globalization, English-Arabic glocal discourse (34%), and English global discourse (8%) are competing to construct coffee branding. For national identity, Arabic local discourse (42%) and Arabic-English glocal discourse (16%) are associated with qahwa; something that gives substantial space (58%) for national identity. These findings enhance our understanding of the linguistic and multimodal dimensions of globalized spaces and their discursive construction of branding at the local scale of globalization. The study recommends further research and suggests some cultural and pedagogical implications for authorities, translation, bilingual awareness, teaching, and learning.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0309829
spellingShingle Abduljalil Nasr Hazaea
Mutahar Qassem
On the road to Mecca: Branding discourses and national identity on coffee shop signage.
PLoS ONE
title On the road to Mecca: Branding discourses and national identity on coffee shop signage.
title_full On the road to Mecca: Branding discourses and national identity on coffee shop signage.
title_fullStr On the road to Mecca: Branding discourses and national identity on coffee shop signage.
title_full_unstemmed On the road to Mecca: Branding discourses and national identity on coffee shop signage.
title_short On the road to Mecca: Branding discourses and national identity on coffee shop signage.
title_sort on the road to mecca branding discourses and national identity on coffee shop signage
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0309829
work_keys_str_mv AT abduljalilnasrhazaea ontheroadtomeccabrandingdiscoursesandnationalidentityoncoffeeshopsignage
AT mutaharqassem ontheroadtomeccabrandingdiscoursesandnationalidentityoncoffeeshopsignage