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"Scrounger-bashing" as national pastime: the prevalence and ferocity of anti-welfare ideology on niche-interest online forums

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Citation

Morrison J (2021) "Scrounger-bashing" as national pastime: the prevalence and ferocity of anti-welfare ideology on niche-interest online forums. Social Semiotics, 31 (3), pp. 383-401. https://doi.org/10.1080/10350330.2021.1930859

Abstract
Recent research has noted the persistence of a long continuum of ¡°anti-welfare¡± discourses that are increasingly embedded in the UK news media, political communication, and popular culture (e.g. Golding and Middleton Citation1982. Images of Welfare: Press and Public Attitudes to Poverty. Oxford: Mark Robertson; Jensen Citation2014. ¡°Welfare Commonsense, Poverty Porn and Doxosophy.¡± Sociological Research Online 19 (3): 277¨C283; Morrison 2019. Scroungers: Moral Panics and Media Myths. London: Zed Books). Historical distinctions between the ¡°deserving¡± and ¡°undeserving poor¡± have been sharpened by successive governments in the service of varying shades of neoliberal governance. While Margaret Thatcher castigated ¡°shirkers¡± in fostering an ideology of economic self-reliance, both New Labour and the Coalition obsessed over ¡°welfare reform¡±: promoting an ideology of ¡°work¡± in symbolic opposition to supposed cultures of ¡°worklessness¡±. But, while ¡°scroungerphobia¡± (Deacon Citation1978. ¡°The Scrounging Controversy: Public Attitudes Towards the Unemployed in Contemporary Britain.¡± Social Policy and Administration 12 (2): 120¨C135) is now a widely recognised sociological phenomenon, scholarly attention to the concept has largely been reserved for its manifestation in tabloid newspapers, political rhetoric and, latterly, ¡°poverty porn¡± television. Even recent work considering the public¡¯s contribution to scrounger discourse(s) on social media focuses on mainstream platforms, such as Twitter and newspaper comment threads (e.g. Van Der Bom et al. Citation2018. ¡°¡®It¡¯s not the Fact They Claim Benefits but Their Useless, Lazy, Drug Taking Lifestyles we Despise¡¯: Analysing Audience Responses to Benefits Street Using Live Tweets.¡± Discourse, Context & Media 21: 36¨C45; Morrison 2019. Scroungers: Moral Panics and Media Myths. London: Zed Books; Paterson Citation2020). This paper begins to address this oversight, by examining how normative anti-welfare discourses infiltrate everyday communication in more disparate online communities ¨C including niche consumer forums. It draws on previously unpublished findings from an analysis of welfare-related conversations in these and other spaces at the height of a recent moral panic over ¡°scroungers¡±: the period from 2013-2016, when Conservative-led governments strove to legitimise sweeping benefit cuts and punitive ¡°welfare reform¡±.

Keywords
Scrounger; welfare; benefits; discourse; forum; comment

Journal
Social Semiotics: Volume 31, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2021
Publication date online14/06/2021
Date accepted by journal14/05/2021
URL
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN1035-0330
eISSN1470-1219

People (1)

Dr James Morrison

Dr James Morrison

Associate Prof. in Journalism, Communications, Media and Culture

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