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Constructions of Migrant Integration in British Public Discourse: Becoming British: Bloomsbury Advances in Critical Discourse Studies

Autor Sam Bennett
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 iul 2019
This is a study into how the public discourse on migrant integration in the UK changed from 2000-2010. The book shows that the discursive construction of integration in the British public sphere shifted from one of cultural pluralism to one of neo-assimilation, informed by a wider spread of neo-liberalism that necessitates self-sufficiency and discourages state assistance. Situated within the Critical Discourse Studies tradition, the book employs a Discourse Historical approach to the data and includes innovative analysis combining 'top-down' (policy documents and media texts) and 'bottom-up' (focus groups with migrants and new citizens) sites of discourse production. In doing so, it provides a broad and detailed perspective of public discourse on integration in the UK. The book shows that understandings of 'integration' are diachronically and synchronically fluid and as such, the term plays an important role as a 'consensus concept' that different actors can support whilst construing it in different ways. Analysis of the data further reveals that integration is interdiscursively linked to other social fields, such as the economy, terrorism and public spending. The book also argues that integration policy has become directed not just at new migrants, but also long-term British citizens and that this has the potential to have considerable impact on community cohesion.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781350123120
ISBN-10: 1350123129
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.35 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Advances in Critical Discourse Studies

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

By rigorously showing that integration discourse is linked to other discursive fields, the book highlights how integration policy is directed not just at new migrants but also long-term British citizens and that this potentially has considerable impact on community cohesion

Notă biografică

Sam Bennett is Assistant Professor at the Faculty of English at Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, Poland.

Cuprins

1. To be or not to be (British): discourse, integration, and the public sphere2. Discourses of race and migration3. (En)acting integration4. Historical and socio-political contexts5: Methodology and data collection6. Analysis of government policy texts7. Analysis of media texts8. Analysis of focus groups9. ConclusionBibliographyIndex

Recenzii

Bennett presents a clear overview of some of the theories of racism which highlights the centrality of the discriminatory and conflicting positions towards migrants ... This depth of analysis continues throughout [the book] ... The use of corpus tools to explore these patterns of recontextualisation is by far Bennett's greatest contribution here.
This thought-provoking, timely book is a major contribution to contemporary migration research, in Britain and beyond. Providing an illuminating discourse-analytic perspective on issues of race, ideology, social inclusion as well as exclusion, it expands our critical understanding of the very momentous of current European developments, Brexit including. Most crucially, it reveals the many ways in which the construction of personal, group and national identity can be manipulated in the public space and bound up with fear, security and conflict.
It is hard to think of a timelier book than Sam Bennett's discourse-historical study of immigration and integration discourses in 21st-century Britain. Bennett provides rich historical context to explain how particular forms of 'othering' pervade government and media discourse on integration. It is very commendable that the book doesn't stop there , but compares and contrasts elite discourses with constructions of integration by various groups of migrants. Bennett closes with suggestions for policy and it would indeed be welcome if the findings of his study were to find their way into the public discourse he investigates.