Ciência_Iscte
Publications
Publication Detailed Description
Moving the immovable: discursive challenge and discursive change in Ulster loyalism
Journal Title
European Journal of Cultural Studies
Year (definitive publication)
2001
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom
More Information
Web of Science®
This publication is not indexed in Web of Science®
Scopus
Google Scholar
This publication is not indexed in Overton
Abstract
This article examines Ulster loyalist discourse and its changeable nature, arguing that recent challenges to Orangeism from Irish nationalists and the loosening of the traditional alliance between Orangeism and the forces of law and order have necessitated the incorporation of a new narrative, which seeks to justify Orangeism on grounds that it is ‘traditional’ and must therefore be granted an unchallenged ‘right to march’ wherever and whenever it wishes. It has been found that this discursive shift is manifest not only at the senior levels of the loyalist community, for example, in the Orange Order’s leadership, but equally at ground level. It is also argued that the frame in which the argument is disseminated to the wider public – one of marching as a ‘civil right’ – has been borrowed from the ‘Catholic’ civil rights protests of the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Civil rights,Discourse,Drumcree,Orangeism,Protestantism
Fields of Science and Technology Classification
- Other Social Sciences - Social Sciences
Português