John Wilson, Karyn Stapleton
Voices of commemoration: The discourse of celebration and confrontation in Northern Ireland
Anniversaries and commemorations
are commonly sources of group solidarity and identity reaffirmation. In
particular, the communal marking of historical anniversaries can be seen as a
mode of community celebration, commemoration, and display. Such events play a
significant role in reinforcing the history, culture, and identity of the group,
as well as strengthening feelings of commonality and solidarity between
community members. In this paper, however, we want to look at situations in
which community commemorations also function as sources of exclusion and
division
. In Northern
Ireland, historical anniversaries and displays (particularly Protestant Orange
marches) are both a central means of cultural/communal expression, and a source
of division, sectarianism, and sporadic violence (Bryan 2000; Jarman 1997).
Moreover, notwithstanding constitutional devolution and the ongoing peace
process, research suggests that attitudes to symbolic community displays remain
strongly partisan. Here, we apply an empirical discursive framework to
better understand the meaning of such commemorations at the level of grass-roots
community identification in Northern Ireland. Drawing on focus group data from
working-class urban groupings (both Protestant/unionist and
Catholic/nationalist), we examine how such anniversaries are constructed and
negotiated in ‘real-life’ talk and interaction; and hence how they come to
function simultaneously as points of solidarity and division within the
community as a whole.
Text - Interdisciplinary Journal for the Study of Discourse, Walter de Gruyter
Print ISSN: 0165-4888
Volume: 25, 09/2005
Pages: 633 - 664
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