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Article

How Malthusian ideology crept into the newsroom: British tabloids and the coverage of the ¡®underclass¡¯

Details

Citation

Harkins S & Lugo-Ocando J (2015) How Malthusian ideology crept into the newsroom: British tabloids and the coverage of the ¡®underclass¡¯. Critical Discourse Studies, 13 (1), pp. 78-93. https://doi.org/10.1080/17405904.2015.1074594

Abstract
This article argues that Malthusianism as a series of discursive regimes, developed in the Victorian-era, serves in times of austerity to reproduce an elite understanding of social exclusion in which those in a state of poverty are to blame for their own situation. It highlights that Malthusianism is present in the public discourse, becoming an underlining feature in news coverage of the so-called ¡®underclass¡¯. Our findings broadly contradict the normative claim that journalism ¡®speaks truth to power¡¯, and suggest instead that overall as a political practice, journalism tends to reproduce and reinforce hegemonic discourses of power. The piece is based on critical discourse analysis, which has been applied to a significant sample of news articles published by tabloid newspapers in Britain which focussed on the concept of the ¡®underclass¡¯. By looking at the evidence, the authors argue that the ¡®underclass¡¯ is a concept used by some journalists to cast people living in poverty as ¡®undeserving¡¯ of public and state support. In so doing, these journalists help create a narrative which supports cuts in welfare provisions and additional punitive measures against some of the most vulnerable members of society.

Keywords
poverty; journalism; underclass; critical discourse analysis; Britain; newspaper discourse

Journal
Critical Discourse Studies: Volume 13, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/12/2015
Publication date online28/08/2015
Date accepted by journal25/04/2015
URL
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN1740-5904
eISSN1740-5912

People (1)

Dr Steven Harkins

Dr Steven Harkins

Lecturer, Communications, Media and Culture