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Writing Justice/Performing Injustice: Reflections on Research, Publicity, and the Birmingham Trojan Horse Affair
Author(s) -
John Holmwood,
Helen Monks,
Matt Woodhead
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
civic sociology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2637-9155
DOI - 10.1525/001c.12089
Subject(s) - trojan horse , injustice , publicity , economic justice , sociology , political science , government (linguistics) , media studies , public opinion , action (physics) , subject (documents) , law , public relations , criminology , library science , politics , linguistics , philosophy , computer science , operating system , physics , quantum mechanics
This article discusses issues of public communication. It does so in terms of the ethics of verbatim theatre and public sociology. The issues raised are exemplified through the Birmingham Trojan Horse affair, which has been subject to extensive media reporting and public inquiries of various kinds as well as legal processes. In that sense, there have been various “courts of public opinion” where the affair has been “staged.” In this article, it is understood as an injustice visited upon a community of British Muslims and the teachers and governors responsible for their schools, an injustice that was largely a consequence of provocative media reporting and peremptory government action. The article addresses the role of verbatim theatre in staging the injustice for public reflection and the role of public sociology as a project of writing for justice.

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