Bread-and-butter politics: democratic disenchantment and everyday politics on an English council estate

Koch, I. (2016). Bread-and-butter politics: democratic disenchantment and everyday politics on an English council estate. American Ethnologist, 43(2), 282 - 294. https://doi.org/10.1111/amet.12305
Copy

Despite evidence of widespread disenchantment with formal politics among England’s impoverished sectors, people on the margins continue to engage with elected representatives on their own terms. On English council estates (social housing projects), residents mediate their experiences of an alien and distant political system by drawing local politicians into localized networks of support and care. While this allows residents to voice demands for “bread and butter,” personalized alliances with politicians rarely translate into collective action. The limits of a “bread and butter” strategy highlight the precariousness of working class movements at a time when the political left has largely been dismantled. They also demonstrate the need to account for the lived realities of social class in aspirational narratives for “alternative” democratic futures.

picture_as_pdf

subject
Accepted Version

Download

Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export