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Ulster Loyalism and the British Media
  

Ulster Loyalism and the British Media (Paperback)

by Alan F. Parkinson (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Four Courts Press Ltd (29 May 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1851823921
  • ISBN-13: 978-1851823925
  • Product Dimensions: 23 x 15.6 x 2.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 993,077 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Synopsis
The growing body of research into Ulster loy alism has tended to focus on its political nature, rather th an on its representation in the British media. This book exa mines media representations of the loyalists, and looks at h ow this has affected policy. '

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars it's time for loyalists and unionists to present their case, 3 Feb 2000
By A Customer
HOW IS IT that the community that bred the IRA is treated with more sympathy than the loyalist and Protestant community? Why are Ulster Prods treated as 'the lepers of British politics'? Serious examinations of loyalism and unionism are still scarce in comparison with the vast quantity of material available on the IRA and modern Irish republicanism. Until now, however, such books have tended to look at political and religious ideas and motivations rather than examine the questions above. Alan F Parkinson, senior lecturer in history and education at South Bank University in London, has taken a different perspective. This book gives a thorough analysis of the media's representation of Ulster's majority community. Parkinson is 'intrigued by the contrast between the sympathy which was displayed for the unionist case during the Edwardian period and the comparative contempt with which it was regarded by people in Great Britain during the current Troubles...' In the first of two separate sections, he tries to work how loyalists see themselves by examining unionist propaganda material and its influence on determining government policy and winning grassroots support in Great Britain. Generally, however, unionists and loyalists do not present a pretty picture to their 'fellow citizens' in Great Britain. This is partly due to the media's lack of analytical coverage of loyalism and partly because of loyalists' own lack of presentational skills. Parkinson argues persuasively that British politicians and the media have misconceived the true nature of loyalism by their virtually exclusive concentration on its negative aspects. This has simplified the Ulster conflict into 'a struggle between the IRA and the British government' in which the Prods are either ignored or dismissed as 'bigots in bowler hats' who probably deserve all they get. Unionist attempts to redress the balance of propaganda against them were late in coming. Martin Smyth's Ulster Unionist Information Institute did not emerge until 1988 - almost two decades after the conflict began! Parkinson states that early 'hate-figure' mudslinging at the IRA and Bernadette Devlin was quite successful, but the later stuff 'Tended to be over-wordy and inappropriate for the 'external' market.' He indicts 'Ulster Unionists' initially slow unawareness of the power of propaganda' and argues that 'Despite the undoubted validity of their argument and the opportunity of capturing the moral high ground at the expense of republican terrorists, unionists were rarely able to capitalise on ant-IRA sentiment in Britain largely because of the way they had themselves been stereotyped in the national media.' Parkinson looks at several key events in the history of the present conflict and sees how the same papers or television programmes handled them. The Enniskillen bomb on Remembrance Sunday in 1987 killed eleven people as they gathered around the town's cenotaph is analysed in detail. This vicious sectarian crime - the work of the Provisional IRA - caused widespread revulsion throughout Britain and Ireland in a way that few others have, before or since. Why was this so and why were loyalists unable to win more sympathy for their cause in its wake? The media made great emphasis of local man Gordon Wilson's public forgiveness of his daughter's killers and castigated those who, like Ian Paisley, called for tighter security measures against the IRA. This 'human interest' angle overlooked the IRA's motivation for their attack. Despite the fact that all eleven dead were Protestants, the media reported it as an attack on the wider community and humanity in general rather than as a sectarian attack on the town's Protestant population. The author observes that the media tends to restrict the term 'sectarian' to loyalist activities and notes that there was no political analysis of the 'Poppy Day Massacre'. Because of this omission, unionists and loyalists were not able to win any greater support for their cause despite the wave of sympathy for the innocent victims and their families in the aftermath of the attack. Perhaps it is time that unionists and loyalists took stock of their present abysmal situation and sought to put a positive case that can capture the imagination of our own people and the ordinary people of Great Britain, North America and Europe. A first step would be to read this book and then to do something about it! Over to you, David, Bob, Cedric and Ian!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Overview, 28 Jan 2000
By A Customer
Adapted from an academic theses, this study is a scholarly yet very readable investigation into the perception of Ulster Loyalists on the British mainland. Testing the tarred assumptions with primary and extensive research, Alan Parkinson concludes that however British the Ulster Loyalists may be, they are not understood and have not been given a fair hearing by the national media. Not content however to make bland assumptions, this book delves into possible reasons and by implication identifies remedies for the Loyalists predicament. Taken a stage farther the book may have been called 'A Spin Doctors Guide for Ulster Loyalists', but nonetheless it stands short as an excellent analysis, and is perhaps representative of the perceptions or misperceptions of Ulster Loyalists within the relations of the world in which they interact.
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