‘Your school needs you to buy a poppy’: Dominance and fragility in school remembrance practices

LIDDLE, Anna (2023). ‘Your school needs you to buy a poppy’: Dominance and fragility in school remembrance practices. Education, Citizenship and Social Justice. [Article]

Documents
32782:627403
[thumbnail of liddle-2023-your-school-needs-you-to-buy-a-poppy-dominance-and-fragility-in-school-remembrance-practices.pdf]
Preview
PDF
liddle-2023-your-school-needs-you-to-buy-a-poppy-dominance-and-fragility-in-school-remembrance-practices.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (177kB) | Preview
Abstract
Generated by the centenary of the First World War, there has been an increased interest in how war is commemorated in English schools. Whilst other authors have argued that the way in which remembrance is marked in schools is militarised and nationalistic, this article reports on a single school case study to provide a deeper discussion of how this is reproduced in everyday practices and a consideration of how alternative forms of remembrance are resisted. Butler’s concept of ‘grievability’ is deployed to interpret the practices where some lives are privileged above others in commemoration creating a militarised ‘red poppy remembrance discourse’. I go on to argue that this discourse, although dominant, is also fragile in nature and attempts to counter this are treated with suspicion to maintain nationalistic and war-normalising messages for the next generation.
More Information
Statistics

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics

Metrics

Altmetric Badge

Dimensions Badge

Share
Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item