This article examines two major rituals of contemporary national life in the UK: association football and military commemoration. It explores the ways in which remembering is enacted and performed within UK football and how these processes are related to issues of power, agency and identity in Britain today. Employing the concepts of collective memory and spectacle, this article argues that ‘memory entrepreneurs’ have sought to embed football as ‘site of memory’ in the performance of military commemoration. It concludes that this has contributed to the transformation of military commemoration, from a ritual that is observed to a spectacle that is consumed. This paper thus contributes to emergent debates on the militarization of civilian spa...
This study explores the development of the postwar memory - or lack of it - of the British war effor...
This paper explores the role of corporations and financial organisations in maintaining a memory of ...
Twenty-eight years after the Taylor Report into the Hillsborough disaster recommended that all footb...
This article examines two major rituals of contemporary national life in the UK: association footbal...
This article examines the museum displays and modern memorials that draw on the role of football and...
The image of World War Two as a "people's war", during which a new sense of British national identit...
One of the often-overlooked legacies of the First World War is how the conflict established the medi...
The image of British troops advancing into battle kicking a football is part of Britain’s First Worl...
In this article, three artworks of the First World War containing images of recreational football ar...
The image of World War Two as a ‘people’s war,’ during which a new sense of British national identi...
As of 1 August 2012, there were 60 figurative subject-specific statues of association football playe...
This article examines public participation in First World War centenary events in Britain between 20...
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
In September 2017, an archaeological excavation at RAF Thorpe Abbotts (also known as Station 139) un...
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In the wake of the First Wor...
This study explores the development of the postwar memory - or lack of it - of the British war effor...
This paper explores the role of corporations and financial organisations in maintaining a memory of ...
Twenty-eight years after the Taylor Report into the Hillsborough disaster recommended that all footb...
This article examines two major rituals of contemporary national life in the UK: association footbal...
This article examines the museum displays and modern memorials that draw on the role of football and...
The image of World War Two as a "people's war", during which a new sense of British national identit...
One of the often-overlooked legacies of the First World War is how the conflict established the medi...
The image of British troops advancing into battle kicking a football is part of Britain’s First Worl...
In this article, three artworks of the First World War containing images of recreational football ar...
The image of World War Two as a ‘people’s war,’ during which a new sense of British national identi...
As of 1 August 2012, there were 60 figurative subject-specific statues of association football playe...
This article examines public participation in First World War centenary events in Britain between 20...
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
In September 2017, an archaeological excavation at RAF Thorpe Abbotts (also known as Station 139) un...
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In the wake of the First Wor...
This study explores the development of the postwar memory - or lack of it - of the British war effor...
This paper explores the role of corporations and financial organisations in maintaining a memory of ...
Twenty-eight years after the Taylor Report into the Hillsborough disaster recommended that all footb...