04169 am 22006133u 450 99655236750331620230621135324.010.7765/9781526114013(CKB)3710000000658914(OCoLC)1030813723(DE-B1597)659563(DE-B1597)9781526114013(EXLCZ)99371000000065891420170206h20162016 uy 0engurcn#nnn|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierLoud and proud passion and politics in the English Defence League /Hilary PilkingtonManchester, England :Manchester University Press,2016.©20161 online resource (xvi, 254 pages) illustrations, portraits, chartsOpen Access e-BooksKnowledge UnlatchedNew EthnographiesIncludes a foreword by Anoop Nayak.1-78499-259-3 1-5261-1401-1 Includes bibliographical references (pages [238]-346) and index.Introduction: Transgressing the cordon sanitaire: understanding the English Defence League as a social movement -- 1. The contagion of stigma: the ethics and politics of research with the 'far right' -- 2. Tommy Robinson's barmy army: the past, present and future of the English Defence League -- 3. Doing the hokey-cokey: everyday trajectories of activism -- 4. 'Not racist, not violent, just no longer silent': aspirations to non-racism -- 5. 'Their way or no way': anti-Islam and anti-Muslim sentiments -- 6. 'Second-class citizens': reordering privilege and prejudice -- 7. 'One big family': emotion, affect and the meaning of activism -- 8. 'Loud and proud': piercing the politics of silencing -- Conclusion: Passion and politics -- Appendix 1. Observed events -- Appendix 2. Respondent set.The book uses interviews, informal conversations and extended observation at EDL events to critically reflect on the gap between the movement's public image and activists' own understandings of it. It details how activists construct the EDL, and themselves, as 'not racist, not violent, just no longer silent' inter alia through the exclusion of Muslims as a possible object of racism on the grounds that they are a religiously not racially defined group. In contrast activists perceive themselves to be 'second-class citizens', disadvantaged and discriminated by a 'two-tier' justice system that privileges the rights of 'others'. This failure to recognise themselves as a privileged white majority explains why ostensibly intimidating EDL street demonstrations marked by racist chanting and nationalistic flag waving are understood by activists as standing 'loud and proud'; the only way of 'being heard' in a political system governed by a politics of silencing. Unlike most studies of 'far right' movements, this book focuses not on the EDL as an organisation - its origins, ideology, strategic repertoire and effectiveness - but on the individuals who constitute the movement. Its ethnographic approach challenges stereotypes and allows insight into the emotional as well as political dimension of activism. At the same time, the book recognises and discusses the complex political and ethical issues of conducting close-up social research with 'distasteful' groups.New ethnographies.Protest movementsGreat BritainRight wing extremistsGreat BritainGreat BritainfastEnglish Defence League.Ethnography.Far right organisations.Islamophobia.Political activism.Populist radical right movements.Social movements.Protest movementsRight wing extremists305.6970941Pilkington Hilary1964,851234Nayak AnoopUkMaJRUAuAdUSABOOK996552367503316Loud and proud2132101UNISA