Can the line cook speak

A critical discourse analysis of the voice and representation of Canadian restaurant staff.

Authors

  • Bray Jamieson University Of Calgary

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55016/ojs/muj.v1i1.76094

Keywords:

voice, discourse analysis, restaurant, representation, silencing, standpoint theory, epistemic violence, hegemony

Abstract

Over the course of the Covid-19 pandemic, restauranteurs and wage-earning restaurant staff found themselves positioned as the focus of an immense amount of mainstream media attention. Never has the restaurant industry been the recipient of such frequent and consistent mainstream coverage, yet scholars have yet to critically engage with the available media discourse. This research explores the mainstream media depiction of the restaurant industry and challenges journalistic practices which prioritize the voices and ideological perspectives of those atop the restaurant industry hierarchy. To demonstrate this phenomenon, I engaged in a critical discourse analysis of 55 published online news articles through the theoretical lens proposed by Gayatri Spivak. The sample was examined to demonstrate who was afforded the discursive space to utilize their voice and share their ideological disposition as well as the ways in which the discursive voice found within the sample shaped a representation of wage-earning restaurant staff. The primary findings of this paper reveal that wage-earning restaurant staff, within the selected sample, were discursively silenced and not provided with an adequate opportunity to share their experience of working in a customer-facing position throughout the Covid-19 pandemic. Wage-earning restaurant staff were rarely afforded the opportunity to speak, however, they were spoken for. I argue throughout this paper that the voice of wage-earning restaurant staff is discursively crafted by those atop the restaurant industry hierarchy and that this phenomenon serves to validate traditional restaurant industry hierarchical structures and reinforce hegemonic ideological perspectives. This study emphasizes the need for journalists to embrace the theoretical disposition of a standpoint theorist and strive to ensure that members of subordinated populations are not subject to the imposition of an inauthentic voice.



 

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Published

2023-02-03

How to Cite

Jamieson, B. (2023). Can the line cook speak: A critical discourse analysis of the voice and representation of Canadian restaurant staff. The Motley Undergraduate Journal, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.55016/ojs/muj.v1i1.76094

Issue

Section

Research and Analytical Articles