The politics of heroes through the prism of popular heroism
Autor: | Nataliya Danilova, Ekaterina Kolpinskaya |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
History
Sociology and Political Science media_common.quotation_subject 05 social sciences Comparative politics Political engagement 050601 international relations Preference 0506 political science Politics Cultural industry Aesthetics Political science Political Science and International Relations 050602 political science & public administration Survey data collection HERO PRISM (surveillance program) media_common |
Zdroj: | British Politics. 15:178-200 |
ISSN: | 1746-9198 1746-918X |
Popis: | In modern day Britain, the discourse of national heroification is routinely utilised by politicians, educationalists and cultural industry professionals, whilst also being a popular concept to describe deserving ‘do-gooders’ who contribute to British society in a myriad of ways. We argue that although this heroification discourse is enacted as a discursive device of encouraging politically and morally desirable behaviour, it is dissociated from the largely under-explored facets of contemporary popular heroism. To compensate for this gap, this paper explores public preferences for heroes using survey data representative of British adults. This analysis demonstrates a conceptual stretching in the understanding of heroism, and allows identifying age- and gender-linked dynamics which effect public choices of heroes. In particular, we demonstrate that age above all determines the preference for having a hero, but does not explain preferences for specific hero-types. The focus on gender illustrates that the landscape of popular heroism reproduces a male-dominated bias which exists in the wider political and cultural heroification discourse. Simultaneously, our study shows that if national heroification discourse in Britain remains male-centric, the landscape of popular heroism is characterised by a gendered trend towards privatisation of heroes being particularly prominent amongst women. In the conclusion, this paper argues for a conceptual revision and re-gendering of the national heroification discourse as a step towards both empirically grounded, and age- and gender-sensitive politics of heroes and heroines. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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