Article published In: Corpus-Pragmatic Studies of Democratization in Public Discourses: New perspectives, methods and materials
Edited by Turo Hiltunen, Turo Vartiainen and Jenni Räikkönen
[Journal of Historical Pragmatics 25:2] 2024
► pp. 329–353
Family, politics and media
Gladstone during the Midlothian campaign, 1879–1880
Available under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 4.0 license.
For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at rights@benjamins.nl.
This article was made Open Access under a CC BY 4.0 license through payment of an APC by or on behalf of the authors.
Published online: 9 August 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.00078.bak
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.00078.bak
Abstract
In this paper, we utilise the Nineteenth Century Newspaper Corpus to examine reporting
surrounding William Gladstone’s Midlothian campaign, a key point in the democratization of British politics where a politician not
only communicated with ordinary people through hustings but indirectly to a wider electorate via media reporting of those
hustings. With the use of social actor analysis (van Leeuwen, Theo. 2008. Discourse and Practice: New Tools for Critical Discourse Analysis. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ), approached through
collocation, we find that a distinctive feature of media reporting was a focus on Gladstone’s family. This surprising intersection
of family and electioneering reveals a powerful hierarchy of social relationships in terms of gender and seniority, which became
an effective propaganda strategy as Gladstone, enabled by Liberal-supporting newspapers, utilised his family as a political
tool.
Keywords: Gladstone, collocation, social actor analysis, electioneering, family
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Midlothian campaign as a focus of generic democratization
- 3.Data and methodology
- 4.Social actor analysis
- 5.Exploratory collocation analysis
- 5.1Collocates of gladstone
- 5.2Collocates of disraeli
- 6.The social practice of leading a family and its intersection with the social practice of electioneering
- 6.1Key collocates in the social actor analysis
- 6.2Focus on Herbert Gladstone
- 6.3Representing the social practice of electioneering
- 6.4Electioneering and news values
- 7.Conclusion – reflecting on historiography and democratization
- Notes
References Corpora, primary sources and text collections
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The corpora used in this paper are available from [URL]
