Introduction: The Discursive Construction of Economic Inequality
in the UK, Eva M. Gomez-Jimenez (University of Granada, Spain)
1. Poverty and Social Exclusion in Britain: A Corpus-Assisted
Discourse Study of Labour and Conservative Party Leaders’ Speeches,
1900-2014, Nuria Lorenzo-Dus (Swansea University, UK) and Sadiq
Almaged (Thi-Qar University, Iraq)
2. Inequality and ‘The Language of Leadership’ in World War II, Joe
Bennett (University of Birmingham, UK)
3. Revisiting the Welfare State Through the Decades: Investigating
the Discursive Construction of the Welfare State in The Times from
1940-2009, Isabelle van der Bom (Chemnitz University of Technology,
Germany) and Laura Paterson (Open University, UK)
4. What Can Be Done about Child Poverty? What The Times Said Then
and What It Says Now, Michael Toolan (University of Birmingham,
UK)
5. Inequality, Accountability and Responsibility in UK Press
Reporting on Corporate Fraud (2004-2014) and Modern Slavery
(2000-2016), Ilse Ras (Leeds University, UK)
6. Health Inequality and the Representation of ‘Risky’ Working
Class Identities in Obesity Policy, Jane Mulderrig (University of
Sheffield, UK)
7. We Are NOT All in This Together: A Corpus Assisted Critical
Stylistics Analysis of Austerity in Print News Media 2009-2010 and
2016-2017, Brian Walker and Lesley Jeffries (University of
Huddersfield, UK)
8. More Inequality, but Less Coverage: How and Why TV News Avoided
‘The Great Debate’ Either Side of the Financial Crisis 2008-2014,
Richard Thomas (University of Swansea, UK)
9. The Democracy We Live in: Can There Be Democracy without
Equality?, Wolfgang Teubert (University of Birmingham, UK)
Afterword, Danny Dorling (University of Oxford, UK)
Index
Examines the discursive representation of different forms of exclusion, inequality and discrimination in the British media from World War II to the present.
Eva M. Gomez-Jimenez is Lecturer of English Language at
the University of Granada, Spain.
Michael Toolan is Professor of English Language at the
University of Birmingham, UK.
[T]his informative and insightful volume is an up-to-date
contribution to the existing literature in CADS and economic
inequality, with both methodological significance and wider
socio-political impact ... On the other hand, by providing critical
analysis of authentic discourse on a range of topics relating to
inequality, this timely edited volume showcases the power of
linguistic tools for investigating how mediated media discourse has
influenced and shaped public perception of inequality.
*International Journal of Communication*
As a reader, I found this volume to be a fascinating and insightful
collection of research papers. The issues discussed are both timely
and pressing, the areas in which inequality are researched are
varied, and the research is methodologically rich. This is a
powerful publication which I hope will be read by a large
audience.
*Journal of Corpora and Discourse Studies*
A brilliant collection focusing on ways in which social inequality
is consistently normalized through language. Engaging throughout,
this book presents a highly disturbing picture of inequality and
poverty in our supposedly developed society, while at the same time
encouraging us to think about how we might change things for the
better.
*David Peplow, Senior Lecturer in English Language, Sheffield
Hallam University, UK*
This fascinating and insightful collection addresses one of the
most pressing issues of our time – the discursive construction of
inequality. It does so with all the rigour that corpus linguistic
methods afford. With a range of techniques exploited to investigate
various sites of inequality, the book provides a comprehensive
overview of how corpus-assisted discourse studies can address
issues of class, poverty, social mobility and austerity. Timely,
powerful and methodologically rich, this is an essential read for
scholars in corpus assisted discourse studies and critical
discourse studies.
*Christopher Hart, Professor of Linguistics, Lancaster University,
UK*
This exciting collection focuses on crucially important current-day
economic inequalities at all levels of the social spectrum. Authors
use Corpus Assisted Discourse Analysis on the British mass media,
to critically evaluate the political, social and interpersonal
impact of economic exclusion: child poverty, unemployment,
corporate fraud, propaganda policies and modern slavery.
Cumulatively, the chapters present disturbing and insightful
analyses followed by eloquent proposals for social change.
*Carmen Rosa Caldas-Coulthard, Professor of Critical Discourse
Analysis, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil and Senior
Research Fellow, University of Birmingham, UK*
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