RICKETT, Bridgette and KILBY, Laura (2025). ‘Fish wives’ in UK Parliament: Discursive intersections of (un)respectability, class and gender in newspaper representations of Angela Rayner. Feminism & Psychology. [Article]
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Fish wifes - Rickett & Kilby - 2025 AA copy.pdf - Accepted Version
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Fish wifes - Rickett & Kilby - 2025 AA copy.pdf - Accepted Version
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Kilby-FishWivesIn(VoR).pdf - Published Version
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Kilby-FishWivesIn(VoR).pdf - Published Version
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Abstract
This research develops an intersectional understanding of UK Newspaper coverage of White, working-class origin women politicians through a single case analysis of the reporting of Angela Rayner and her supposed attempt to “distract” the UK Prime Minister. A Dual process discourse analysis was conducted on 74 UK newspaper articles (47,000 words) whose main topic was Rayner and the alleged incident. The two overarching discourses identified - unrespectable “fish wives” and respectable “working-class heroes”– functioned to both confer and revoke gendered and classed notions of the (un)respectable politician to reproduce the “elite male as norm” and class the gendered double bind. The discourses also functioned to restrict working-class women’s ability to adopt, reject, or demolish elite, masculine standards and caution against working-class women politicians by framing class markers as inherently dangerous (e.g., “inner fishwife”) and unrespectable (e.g. uncouth and hyper-sexualised) compared to White middle-class feminised standards. Finally, these discourses worked to reassert classed and gendered boundaries via portraying working-class women politicians as unworthy and potentially dangerous and normalising (White) masculinised power and privilege. This technology of governance has implications for voting decisions, our shared understanding of the overall appropriateness of working-class women in positions of power as well as our treatment towards them.
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