‘You say rich, I say job creator’: how Fox News framed the Great Recession through the moral discour...

Saved in:

Bibliographic Details
Title: ‘You say rich, I say job creator’: how Fox News framed the Great Recession through the moral discourse of producerism;
Authors and Corporations: Peck, Reece
In: Media, Culture & Society, 36, 2014, 4, p. 526-535
published:
SAGE Publications
Media Type: Article, E-Article

Not logged in

further information
Physical Description: 526-535
ISSN: 0163-4437
1460-3675
DOI: 10.1177/0163443714527565
published in: Media, Culture & Society
Language: English
Subjects:
Collection: SAGE Publications (CrossRef)
Table of Contents

<jats:p>In this article, I conduct a textual analysis of Fox News’s leading opinion programs during the Great Recession. I deconstruct the rhetorical strategies these programs deployed to advance the network’s free market interpretation of the economic crisis. Key to Fox’s interpretive strategy was a claim to represent ‘the Forgotten man’ of the downturn. However, in my analysis I show how this claim was established less by advocating policies that directly support working-class material interests and more by presenting Fox News pundits as the protectors and advocates of traditional moral-economic principles. Fox News pundits drew these principles from a long-standing strain of the American populist tradition called ‘producerism.’ My analysis illustrates how – in framing the wealthy and the business class as ‘job creators’ – Fox News programs reworked this tradition in order to include corporate managers in the moral community of producers, alongside members of the working class. This strategy was successful, I argue, because this earlier American political discourse still informs, often in unrecognized ways, the underlying normative assumptions that are expressed in modern debates about class, work, and wealth distribution.</jats:p>