A Critical Analysis of Britain’s Living, Dead and Zombie Multiculturalism: From 7/7 to the London 2012 Olympic Games

Chris Allen

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    A day after the London 2012 Bid Committee succeeded in bringing the Olympic Games to Britain using the slogan “the world in one city”, a series of coordinated suicide bomb attacks occurred across London (7/7). In one day, Britain’s somewhat beleaguered multiculturalism went from prompting national celebrations to being decried as “dead” by politicians and commentators alike. Against a backdrop of the Committee’s success in July 2005 through to the end of the Games themselves in August 2012, this article analyses the social and political discourses and debates that ensued in relation to Britain’s multiculturalism. Exploring the metamorphosis of these discourses—using the analogous language of being alive, dead and zombie—this article reflects on the impact and legacy of the London Games on future understandings of multiculturalism. In doing so, this article argues that the everyday lived variety of multiculturalism will always be distinct and different from the political discourses appropriated—or rejected—by political actors
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)18-33
    Number of pages15
    JournalSocial Sciences
    Volume4
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 24 Dec 2014

    Keywords

    • multiculturalism
    • Islam
    • Muslims
    • 7/7
    • zombies
    • London Olympics
    • Britain
    • politics
    • discourse

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