'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. (March 2018)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- '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. (March 2018)
- Main Title:
- '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
- Authors:
- van der Bom, Isabelle
Paterson, Laura L.
Peplow, David
Grainger, Karen - Abstract:
- Highlights: Tweets as live audience responses to the TV programme Benefits Street II. Corpus of data comprises 11, 623 tweets sourced from over 4000 Twitter accounts. Our analysis examines public reactions to mediatised constructions of poverty. Tweeters draw upon scrounger, underclass, and flawed consumerism discourses. Benefits claimants are typified as non-human 'creatures' and objectionable beings. Abstract: This paper capitalises on the instantaneity of Twitter as a communicative medium by analysing live audience responses to the second series of the controversial television programme Benefits Street. We examine the discourses and representation of social class drawn upon in public reactions to the program. We compiled a corpus of live tweets that were sent during the first airing of each episode of Benefits Street II, which included the hashtags #BenefitsStreet and/or #BenefitStreet. Our corpus comprises 11, 623 tweets sourced from over four thousand Twitter accounts. Drawing on techniques from corpus-based discourse analysis, and contrasting our findings to an earlier study on Benefits Street by Baker and McEnery (2015a), we offer an insight into viewers' discursive constructions of benefit claimants not just as scroungers, but as a more generally morally inadequate and flawed underclass. We argue that poverty porn programmes such as Benefits Street encourage viewers to see any positive representations of benefits claimants as exceptions to the rule.
- Is Part Of:
- Discourse, context & media. Volume 21(2018)
- Journal:
- Discourse, context & media
- Issue:
- Volume 21(2018)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 21, Issue 2018 (2018)
- Year:
- 2018
- Volume:
- 21
- Issue:
- 2018
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2018-0021-2018-0000
- Page Start:
- 36
- Page End:
- 45
- Publication Date:
- 2018-03
- Subjects:
- Twitter -- Audience response -- Corpus-based discourse analysis -- Benefits Street -- Reality TV
Discourse analysis -- Periodicals
Digital media -- Periodicals
Mass media and language -- Periodicals
Communication -- Periodicals
Communication
Digital media
Discourse analysis
Mass media and language
Periodicals
401.4105 - Journal URLs:
- http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/22116958 ↗
http://www.sciencedirect.com/ ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1016/j.dcm.2017.11.003 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 2211-6958
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - BLDSS-3PM
British Library HMNTS - ELD Digital store - Ingest File:
- 5764.xml