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Journal article 1265 views 274 downloads

‘Unhappy News’: Process, Rhetoric, and Context in the Making of the Happiness Problem

Ashley Frawley Orcid Logo

Sociological Research Online, Volume: 23, Issue: 1, Pages: 43 - 66

Swansea University Author: Ashley Frawley Orcid Logo

Abstract

This article examines the emergence and spread of happiness as a social problem, drawing on a study of UK national newspapers. It draws on insights from social problems constructionism and related social movement theory to analyse the rise of the phenomenon in terms of the processual, rhetorical, an...

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Published in: Sociological Research Online
ISSN: 1360-7804 1360-7804
Published: Sage 2018
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa39093
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first_indexed 2018-03-15T20:05:57Z
last_indexed 2020-10-20T02:50:35Z
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spelling 2020-10-19T11:44:48.6829877 v2 39093 2018-03-15 ‘Unhappy News’: Process, Rhetoric, and Context in the Making of the Happiness Problem 9279d7a34ced689e04eb6bdc56e74a64 0000-0002-4691-4612 Ashley Frawley Ashley Frawley true false 2018-03-15 CSSP This article examines the emergence and spread of happiness as a social problem, drawing on a study of UK national newspapers. It draws on insights from social problems constructionism and related social movement theory to analyse the rise of the phenomenon in terms of the processual, rhetorical, and contextual factors involved in its construction, transmission and institutionalisation. Issue ownership, flexible syntax, experiential commensurability, empirical credibility and narrative fidelity are argued to have contributed to the discursive spread of happiness as a social problem in this public arena. A cultural context hospitable to claims about social issues constructed in highly individualised and personalised terms is argued to have contributed to the issue's widespread embrace. Journal Article Sociological Research Online 23 1 43 66 Sage 1360-7804 1360-7804 happiness, master frames, social construction, social problems, well-being 1 3 2018 2018-03-01 10.1177/1360780417744791 COLLEGE NANME Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy COLLEGE CODE CSSP Swansea University 2020-10-19T11:44:48.6829877 2018-03-15T16:22:17.9367363 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Public Health Ashley Frawley 0000-0002-4691-4612 1 0039093-09042018152200.pdf 39093.pdf 2018-04-09T15:22:00.8930000 Output 791498 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2018-12-13T00:00:00.0000000 true eng
title ‘Unhappy News’: Process, Rhetoric, and Context in the Making of the Happiness Problem
spellingShingle ‘Unhappy News’: Process, Rhetoric, and Context in the Making of the Happiness Problem
Ashley Frawley
title_short ‘Unhappy News’: Process, Rhetoric, and Context in the Making of the Happiness Problem
title_full ‘Unhappy News’: Process, Rhetoric, and Context in the Making of the Happiness Problem
title_fullStr ‘Unhappy News’: Process, Rhetoric, and Context in the Making of the Happiness Problem
title_full_unstemmed ‘Unhappy News’: Process, Rhetoric, and Context in the Making of the Happiness Problem
title_sort ‘Unhappy News’: Process, Rhetoric, and Context in the Making of the Happiness Problem
author_id_str_mv 9279d7a34ced689e04eb6bdc56e74a64
author_id_fullname_str_mv 9279d7a34ced689e04eb6bdc56e74a64_***_Ashley Frawley
author Ashley Frawley
author2 Ashley Frawley
format Journal article
container_title Sociological Research Online
container_volume 23
container_issue 1
container_start_page 43
publishDate 2018
institution Swansea University
issn 1360-7804
1360-7804
doi_str_mv 10.1177/1360780417744791
publisher Sage
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Health and Social Care - Public Health{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Public Health
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description This article examines the emergence and spread of happiness as a social problem, drawing on a study of UK national newspapers. It draws on insights from social problems constructionism and related social movement theory to analyse the rise of the phenomenon in terms of the processual, rhetorical, and contextual factors involved in its construction, transmission and institutionalisation. Issue ownership, flexible syntax, experiential commensurability, empirical credibility and narrative fidelity are argued to have contributed to the discursive spread of happiness as a social problem in this public arena. A cultural context hospitable to claims about social issues constructed in highly individualised and personalised terms is argued to have contributed to the issue's widespread embrace.
published_date 2018-03-01T03:49:37Z
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