Allison Cavanagh
University of Leeds
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Publication
Featured researches published by Allison Cavanagh.
Capital & Class | 2012
Allison Cavanagh; Alex Dennis
An analysis of commentary on the UK’s August 2011 riots reveals shifts in the way the media and politicians now construe concepts of youth, race, criminality and deprivation. By comparing the response to these events with that which followed the riots of 1981, these changes can be clarified and illuminated. This analysis reveals that discussions of ‘social problems’ exploited by ‘infiltrators’ (1981) have been replaced by notions of ‘pure criminality’ and ‘mob rule’. The implications of these changes for contemporary protest, and some ways in which the riots and other forms of protest can be related, are drawn out.
Sociological Research Online | 2013
Allison Cavanagh; Alex Dennis
This paper describes an analysis of poster and recommender activities in an online news forum. Quantitative analyses of patterns of posting and recommending suggest that claims about ‘horizontality’ and ‘online community’ are oversimplifications, as there is strong evidence to suggest that the actual workings of networked discussion communities incorporate a wide range of competing and mutually-contradictory orientations, activities and strategies. A qualitative analysis of particular posters’ rhetorical strategies provides evidence for the argument that an orientation to conventions (in particular using a dialogical mode of address) is more important than actual opinion or semantic content in gaining popularity. The implications of these findings, and some suggestions for how this work might be developed, are discussed.
Journalism Studies | 2018
Allison Cavanagh
This paper draws on a wider study of letters to the editor of the Times published in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It is specifically concerned with the nature of women’s contributions to this, the United Kingdom’s “paper of record”, at a crucial historical period. At this time, rapid transformations of social and cultural power and status were linked to equally rapid transformations of the role and function of the press. Women’s contributions are of particular interest as women’s public-facing work was often at the forefront of changes in cultural power. The paper examines the ways in which women used the forum of letters to the editor and what this reveals about the nature of publicity and feminine public identity in the period.
Archive | 2007
Allison Cavanagh
Sociology Compass | 2009
Allison Cavanagh
Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture | 2007
Allison Cavanagh
Archive | 2016
Allison Cavanagh; Alex Dennis
MedieKultur: Journal of Media and Communication Research | 2013
Allison Cavanagh
Archive | 2007
Allison Cavanagh
Archive | 2016
Allison Cavanagh