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Journal ArticleDOI

Narrating Crisis: The Discursive Construction of the `Winter of Discontent'

Colin Hay
- 01 May 1996 - 
- Vol. 30, Iss: 2, pp 253-277
TLDR
In this article, the authors argue for an interpretation of the winter of discontent as a moment of state crisis, rather than the mere accumulation of contradictions, but rather to a moment in transition and decisive intervention.
Abstract
The winter of discontent continues to exert a powerful hold over the British political imaginary. It acts as a discursive key to a collective mythology seemingly appealed to, and conjured, in each wave of industrial unrest, in each hint of political turmoil and, until recently, whenever the election of a Labour Government looked credible. In this paper I consider the rhetorical strategies and linguistic devices deployed by the tabloid media in the narration of the events of the winter of 1978-79. I argue for an interpretation of the winter of discontent as a moment of state crisis. By crisis however I do not refer to the mere accumulation of contradictions but rather to a moment of transition, a moment of decisive intervention. Within such a framework, the winter of discontent emerges as a strategic moment in the transformation of the British state, and perhaps the key moment in the pre-history of Thatcherism. For, as I hope to demonstrate, the initial appeal of the New Right was premised upon its ability to offer a convincing construction of the winter of discontent as symptomatic of a more fundamental crisis of the state. In such a moment of crisis, a particular type of decisive intervention was called for. In this discursive construction of crisis the New Right proved itself capable of changing, if not the hearts and minds of the electorate, then certainly the predominant perceptions of the political context. It recruited subjects to its vision of the necessary response to the crisis of a monolithic state besieged by the trade unions. This was perhaps the only truly hegemonic moment of Thatcherism. It occurred well before Mrs Thatcher entered Number 10. It is thus not surprising that one of the most enduring and distinctive legacies of Thatcherism has been the new political lexicon of crisis, siege and subterfuge born of the winter of discontent. Language: en

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ideas, Politics, and Public Policy

TL;DR: A review of the literature on the causal mechanisms that link ideas to policy-making outcomes can be found in this article, where the authors identify the actors who seek to influence policy making with their ideas, ascertaining the institutional conditions under which these actors have more or less influence, and understanding how political discourse affects the degree to which policy ide...
Journal ArticleDOI

Critical Semiotic Analysis and Cultural Political Economy.

TL;DR: In this article, a case is made for cultural political economy (CPE) by exploring the constitutive role of semiosis in economic and political activities and social order more generally.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cultural political economy and critical policy studies

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce cultural political economy as a distinctive approach in the social sciences, including policy studies, and explore both semiosis and structuration in terms of the evolutionary mechanisms of variation, selection, and retention and highlight the role of specific forms of agency and specific technologies.
Journal ArticleDOI

`A Phantom Menace and the New Apartheid': The Social Construction of Asylum-Seekers in the United Kingdom:

Nick Lynn, +1 more
- 01 Jul 2003 - 
TL;DR: This paper presented a discursive and rhetorical analysis of letters written to British national newspapers by members of the public, and found that Asylum-seekers find themselves [re]positioned and contrasted with a variety of other social groups in such a way as to justify disregarding some of the central tenets o...
Journal ArticleDOI

Organizational Discourse: Key Contributions and Challenges

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight the increasing significance of organizational discourse as a field of inquiry and identify several ways in which organizational discourse contributes to the study and understanding of organizations, and also identify a number of challenges faced by organizational discourse advocates, suggesting that in some cases they are not insurmountable while in others they are unwarranted.
References
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Book

State Theory: Putting the Capitalist State in Its Place

Bob Jessop
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a theory of the capitalist state, the value form, the state as strategy, and hegemonic projects from state forms and functions to the State as Strategy.
Book

Television, Audiences and Cultural Studies

David Morley
TL;DR: In this paper, a multi-faceted exploration of audience research is presented, in which Morley draws on a rich body of empirical work to examine the emergence, development and future of the audience research field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ideology and Modern Culture

TL;DR: The authors reconstruire les arguments of J. Thompson (« Ideology and Modern Culture », 1990) contre les versions theoriques qui proclament la fin de l'ideologie and engager sa contribution au debat actuel sur l'IDEologie, i.e. sa theorie de la mediatisation de la culture.
Book

Language as Ideology

Bob Hodge, +1 more
TL;DR: This new edition presents, in a major new chapter, the advances made in the field of critical language study; and it gives an account of the authors' current position through a detailed analysis and theoretical discussion of a related set of texts.
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