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Sociology seminar series: Hilary Pilkington ‘Loud and Proud’: Youth activists in the English Defence League

Dates:11 June 2014
Times:14:00 - 15:00
What is it:Seminar
Organiser:School of Social Sciences
Who is it for:University staff, Adults, Current University students
Speaker:Hilary Pilkingon
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  • In category "Seminar"
  • In group "(SoSS) Sociology"
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This paper considers the meanings young members of the ‘new far right’ English Defence League (EDL) attach to their activism. Based on an ethnographic study (April 2012-Noveber 2013) including interviews with 35 grassroots activists, it argues that the movement’s trademark slogan ‘Not racist, not violent, just no longer silent’ denotes more than a cynical PR strategy. In contrast to a ‘politics’ they reject (understood as ‘debating’, ‘listening’ and ‘reading the Sunday Times’), participation in EDL actions provides young people with a way of ‘getting your point across’, ‘speaking out’ and ‘standing strong’. This, it is argued, is indicative of the experience of the political sphere by some young people as characterised by a ‘politics of silencing’ in which ‘legitimate’ political discourse is closed down due to the social distance between ‘politicians’ and ‘people like us’ and the legal and cultural circumscriptions on ‘acceptable’ issues for discussion. Drawing on Mouffe’s (2005: 6) argument that right wing populism has made inroads in those places where traditional democratic parties have lost their appeal to an electorate no longer able to distinguish between them in the ‘stifling consensus’ that has gripped the political system, the paper traces the resonance of these tropes in the narratives of ‘the political’ among a broader sample of (non-activist) young people in the UK (based on representative survey and interview data gathered for the FP7 MYPLACE project of which the EDL ethnography is also a part). The paper asks whether the desire to engage in politics in a ‘loud and proud’ way might confirm Mouffe’s argument that a democracy that ‘works’ for ‘the people’ may not be one based on ‘a universal rational consensus’ managed through institutions that ‘reconcile all conflicting interests and values’ but rather one in which there is a vibrant public sphere of political contestation (ibid. p.3).

Speaker

Hilary Pilkingon

Organisation: University of Manchester

  • http://staffprofiles.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/Profile.aspx?Id=hilary.pilkington&curTab=1

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