Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

One of the biggest threats to modern civilisation? The weaponisation of "wokeness" in the UK press and political discourses.

Smith, David S.

Authors



Abstract

Though the term originated in the early twentieth century, it is only recently "wokeness" has become a staple of British media discourse. Typically, the concept features in commentaries and exchanges about institutional power, censorship, minority rights/representation, and structural racism, i.e. "culture wars" discourses. Polling suggests that the public considers wokeness a threat despite lacking clarity or consensus on its specific meaning. This study addresses this ambiguity, combining an analysis of coverage in the UK press with posts on Twitter and a questionnaire, asking UK respondents to define and exemplify wokeness. All samples revealed a multi-faceted concept observed at individual, group, cultural and corporate levels. A range of positive and negative framings were found, e.g. awareness and compassion vs. weakness and puritanism. Broader narratives constructed around wokeness include aspirational traits, moral posturing, a modern secular religion, and an insurgent "woke agenda". These offer insights into how the concept is characterised and operationalised.

Citation

SMITH, D.S. 2023. One of the biggest threats to modern civilisation? The weaponisation of "wokeness" in the UK press and political discourses. Presented at the 2023 International PhD scholar conference: researching sensitive subjects and fragile lives, 5-7 December 2023, [virtual conference].

Presentation Conference Type Lecture
Conference Name 2023 International PhD scholar conference: researching sensitive subjects and fragile lives
Conference Location [virtual conference]
Start Date Dec 5, 2023
End Date Dec 7, 2023
Publication Date Dec 7, 2023
Deposit Date Dec 6, 2023
Publicly Available Date Dec 7, 2023
Keywords Wokeness; Culture wars; UK press; British media discourses
Public URL https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/2166358

Files






You might also like



Downloadable Citations