e-space
Manchester Metropolitan University's Research Repository

    The language of social entrepreneurs

    Parkinson, Caroline and Howorth, Carole (2008) The language of social entrepreneurs. Entrepreneurship and Regional Development, 20 (3). pp. 285-309. ISSN 0898-5626

    [img]
    Preview
    Accepted Version
    Available under License In Copyright.

    Download (150kB) | Preview

    Abstract

    This paper questions the application of the entrepreneurship discourse to social entrepreneurship in the UK and looks at how people ‘doing’ social enterprise appropriate or re-write the discourse to articulate their own realities. Drawing on phenomenological enquiry and discourse analysis, the study analyses the micro discourses of social entrepreneurs, as opposed to the meta rhetorics of (social) entrepreneurship. Analysis using both corpus linguistics software and Critical Discourse Analysis showed a preoccupation among interviewees with local issues, collective action, geographical community and local power struggles. Echoes of the enterprise discourse are evident but couched in linguistic devices that suggest a modified social construction of entrepreneurship, in which interviewees draw their legitimacy from a local or social morality. These findings are at odds ideologically with the discursive shifts of UK social enterprise policy over the last decade, in which a managerially defined rhetoric of enterprise is used to promote efficiency, business discipline and financial independence. The paper raises critical awareness of the tension in meanings appropriated to the enterprise discourse by social enterprise policy and practice and illustrates the value of discourse analysis for entrepreneurship and social entrepreneurship research.

    Impact and Reach

    Statistics

    Activity Overview
    6 month trend
    62Downloads
    6 month trend
    18Hits

    Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.

    Altmetric

    Repository staff only

    Edit record Edit record