This article examines the use of personal narratives in two tabloid newspaper campaigns against a controversial welfare reform popularly known as the ‘bedroom tax’. It aims firstly to evaluate whether the personal narratives operate as political testimony to challenge government accounts of welfare reform and dominant stereotypes of benefits claimants, and secondly to assess the potential for and limits to progressive advocacy in popular journalism. The study uses content analysis of 473 articles over the course of a year in the Daily Mirror and Sunday People newspapers, and qualitative analysis of a sub-set of 113 articles to analyse the extent to which the campaign articles extrapolated from the personal to the general, and the role of ...
Newspaper campaigns embody newspaper’ most emphatic claims to speak for ‘the people’, and as such ar...
Newspaper campaigns embody newspaper’ most emphatic claims to speak for ‘the people’, and as such ar...
Once thought of as sitting outside of institutional politics, social movements have been a consisten...
Campaign advocacy is a common but rarely researched practice in British tabloid journalism. Newspap...
This article examines coverage presented in a news campaign (on asylum and immigration) by the UK ta...
This article examines widely circulating discourses on tabloid newspapers, analyzing what they tell ...
This article argues that Malthusianism as a series of discursive regimes, developed in the Victorian...
Over the past two decades there has been an increasing policy focus on the obligations of unemployed...
The wives of politicians are a longstanding feature of electoral campaign coverage in the UK, and ye...
The news media are often accused of reporting politics in a too narrow and consensual way, excluding...
Campaign journalism is a distinctive but under-researched form of editorialised news reporting that ...
This article contributes to the debate on the relationship between marketing and propaganda through ...
The issue our paper highlights is (a) how we theorise the articulation of media representation(s) of...
Theorists of left and right agree that periods of crisis are fertile times at which to precipitate c...
This article offers statistical and discourse analysis of political leaders’ profile pages during th...
Newspaper campaigns embody newspaper’ most emphatic claims to speak for ‘the people’, and as such ar...
Newspaper campaigns embody newspaper’ most emphatic claims to speak for ‘the people’, and as such ar...
Once thought of as sitting outside of institutional politics, social movements have been a consisten...
Campaign advocacy is a common but rarely researched practice in British tabloid journalism. Newspap...
This article examines coverage presented in a news campaign (on asylum and immigration) by the UK ta...
This article examines widely circulating discourses on tabloid newspapers, analyzing what they tell ...
This article argues that Malthusianism as a series of discursive regimes, developed in the Victorian...
Over the past two decades there has been an increasing policy focus on the obligations of unemployed...
The wives of politicians are a longstanding feature of electoral campaign coverage in the UK, and ye...
The news media are often accused of reporting politics in a too narrow and consensual way, excluding...
Campaign journalism is a distinctive but under-researched form of editorialised news reporting that ...
This article contributes to the debate on the relationship between marketing and propaganda through ...
The issue our paper highlights is (a) how we theorise the articulation of media representation(s) of...
Theorists of left and right agree that periods of crisis are fertile times at which to precipitate c...
This article offers statistical and discourse analysis of political leaders’ profile pages during th...
Newspaper campaigns embody newspaper’ most emphatic claims to speak for ‘the people’, and as such ar...
Newspaper campaigns embody newspaper’ most emphatic claims to speak for ‘the people’, and as such ar...
Once thought of as sitting outside of institutional politics, social movements have been a consisten...