This study is a discourse analysis of four street newspapers from Europe an
d the United States. Street newspapers (SNPs), which are sold on the street
by homeless people, usually claim to make society aware of homelessness an
d related issues, to be a platform for homeless people and to help them reg
ain independence and self-respect. This analysis will question this claim.
It describes the framing of homeless people's voices and homelessness issue
s in these newspapers by looking at their objectives, topics and text genre
s, and at the (self-)representation of homeless people in texts written by
them, or about them. The European SNPs give a limited platform to homeless
people's voices, and tend to limit these to personal narratives and poetry.
In contrast the American street newspaper, written by (former) homeless pe
ople gives a wide and diversified platform to the issues surrounding homele
ssness and to the individuals concerned. However, it is not completely free
of a certain emphasis on feelings and pathos, which is also observed, with
variations, in the European SNPs, and in many ways evokes traditional poli
tical and media discourse on poor and marginal people, reinforcing the nega
tive social ethos of the homeless.