2013
DOI: 10.1111/1467-954x.12018
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Poverty Talk: How People Experiencing Poverty Deny Their Poverty and Why They Blame ‘The Poor’

Abstract: Drawing on life history interviews with sixty men and women in north‐east England who were caught up in ‘the low‐pay, no‐pay cycle’, this article describes how people living in poverty talk about poverty – in respect of themselves and others. Paradoxically, interviewees subscribed to a powerful set of ideas that denied poverty and morally condemned ‘the poor’. These findings are theorized in four ways: first, informants deployed close points of comparison that diminished a sense of relative poverty and depriva… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
2
1

Citation Types

10
213
1
5

Year Published

2015
2015
2019
2019

Publication Types

Select...
4
2
1

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 228 publications
(229 citation statements)
references
References 30 publications
10
213
1
5
Order By: Relevance
“…Lastly, like Shildrick and MacDonald (2013), we found support for the mainstream dictates of healthy eating across our sample, regardless of class of origin, or current financial circumstances. Perhaps signalling the overwhelming dominance of healthy eating discourses aligned with an anti-obesity framework (Beagan et al, 2015), almost everyone distanced themselves from lowbrow pre-packaged foods and fast foods, almost always through the moral discourse of healthy eating.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Lastly, like Shildrick and MacDonald (2013), we found support for the mainstream dictates of healthy eating across our sample, regardless of class of origin, or current financial circumstances. Perhaps signalling the overwhelming dominance of healthy eating discourses aligned with an anti-obesity framework (Beagan et al, 2015), almost everyone distanced themselves from lowbrow pre-packaged foods and fast foods, almost always through the moral discourse of healthy eating.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 70%
“…Shildrick and MacDonald (2013) call this class disidentification, suggesting that people living in poverty are necessarily "drawn into conjuring up phantom Others; an 'underclass' situated financially, culturally, socially and morally below them" (p. 299). In their study too, nutrition and diet were the focus for moral judgments, depicting the undeserving poor as providing food of poor nutritional quality for their families.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…A key characteristic of neoliberal societies is an increase in shaming discourses (Peacock et al, 2014;Shildrick and MacDonald, 2013), with the obese body associated with ideas of indolence and lack of control. Furthermore, the obese body is usually "classed", with poor and working class bodies embodying much that is problematic.…”
Section: Shame Stigma and Classed Obesitymentioning
confidence: 99%