ABSTRACT
This paper focuses on the representation of the notion of employability and the job-seeking ‘reality’. It is part of a wider research project that looks closely into the careers services sector within Higher Education Institutions in the United Kingdom. The chosen methodology, that is corpus-based critical discourse analysis, combined qualitative and quantitative methods and tools for the analysis of 2.6 million words deriving from 58 university websites, and more specifically the careers services sections. The analysis brings to light some problematic, common-sense ideas that are being disseminated by these services and encourages the denaturalisation of the careers services’ discourse. It shows that the language used by careers services reproduces and promotes neoliberal ideology. In addition, it argues that the notion of employability could be interpreted as a pseudo-solution to the social problem of (youth) unemployment and fierce competition in the graduate job market.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful to Dr Michael Pearce, Professor Angela Smith, Dr Charlotte Taylor and the anonymous reviewers for their useful comments and suggestions.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Additional information
Funding
Notes on contributors
Maria Fotiadou
Maria Fotiadou has recently finished her doctoral studies at the University of Sunderland. Her thesis explored the discourse of careers services in UK university websites. Her research interests are in critical discourse analysis, corpus linguistics, the discourse of employability, gender studies, language and power, ideology, and resistance.