Constructing the Welfare State in the British Press

Boundaries and Metaphors in Political Discourse

Dr Malgorzata Paprota author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:14th Jan '21

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Constructing the Welfare State in the British Press cover

Investigates the discursive construction of the concept of the welfare state in the British press during a time of financial crisis and austerity.

Analysing political discourse in the British press during a time of crisis and austerity, this book examines how the concept of the welfare state has been constructed between 2008 and 2015. At a time when the financial crisis and government policies have put the welfare state under increased pressure, a corpus from four British newspapers from across the political spectrum - the Guardian, Daily Mirror, Daily Mail, and Daily Telegraph - is brought together to investigate the political debate on its evaluation and the ambiguity about its exact definition.

Combining two theoretical approaches, Malgorzata Paprota outlines the figurative models and scenarios relevant to this element of the political system. The discourse-historical approach to discourse analysis is used to establish what the welfare state is, tracing the boundaries of the concept and which elements of political reality are explicitly associated with it. Conceptual metaphor theory is then used to explore the figurative conceptualisations of the welfare state. Together, this book shows the discursive construction, and shifting boundaries and metaphors, of the welfare state by the British press and its use in current political debates.

Paprota skillfully shows how metaphorical models of the welfare state shape and limit our understanding of its functions and frame the debate about its reform. * Malgorzata Fabiszak, University Professor, Department of Cognitive Linguistics, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland *

ISBN: 9781350125315

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 508g

240 pages