Locality, Politics, and Culture; Poplar in the 1920s
- 1 June 1988
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
- Vol. 6 (2) , 151-168
- https://doi.org/10.1068/d060151
Abstract
The relationship between a local polity and its civil society is explored, and it is argued that local polities cannot be understood in isolation from the specific institutions, practices, and culture of the locality. This is no longer a particularly novel claim to make, of course; yet it is a claim interpreted in a peculiarly narrow way by current theorists of the locality and the local state, who see the influence of civil society on local politics wholly in terms of class. The author begins this paper by offering an alternative theoretical framework which unites locality, politics, and culture, In the second section the political beliefs and policies of the Labour Party in the cast London borough of Poplar in the 1920s are examined and it is shown how local cultural values and ways of understanding the world shaped those political commitments to a very large degree. In the third part the social power relations are explored which developed between the Labour-controlled local state and the institutions of its civil society and which sprang from those local Labour Party values, These power structures changed during the 1920s, shifting from a participatory form of mass politics in the early 1920s to a much more exclusionary and elitist mode later in the decade. It will be argued that both types of power relations can be linked very closely to Poplar's local culture, and in the final section some conclusions will be drawn from this about the politics of local culture.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Understanding political alignments in contemporary Britain: do localities matter?Political Geography Quarterly, 1987
- The changing urban and regional system in the United KingdomRegional Studies, 1986
- The Neighbourhood Effect Revisited: Spatial Science or Political Regionalism?Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 1986
- Implementation versus planmaking: The example of List Q and the depressed areas, 1922–39Planning Perspectives, 1986
- Political Action and Social IdentityPublished by Springer Nature ,1985
- Introduction: Class, Locality and IdeologyPublished by Springer Nature ,1985
- The local state and restructuring social relations theory and practiceInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 1982
- Class and the local stateInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 1982
- The Anatomy of Capitalist SocietiesPublished by Springer Nature ,1981
- Urban Growth and Social Structure in Nineteenth-Century PoplarThe London Journal, 1975