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London Riot Re-enactment Society
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by matthew hyland on Thursday, 2 February, 2006 - 21:31
anathematician Speaks for itself, in devastating earnest Join the London Riot Re-enactment Society now! The London Riot Re-enactment Society will stage re-enactments of noted riots from London's history, with some attempt at historical accuracy. You are no doubt aware of the widespread popularity of historical re-enactment societies, you may also be aware of moves to re-enact more recent events in history. The London Riot Re-enactment Society was inspired by the idea that we can re-enact not the distant past, but events that we remember and may actually have taken part in. We have chosen define our re-enactment society not by choosing a period of time, but by choosing a theme. We will tap London's rich history of rioting, and make these riots live again, in our re-enactments. Join now, or find out more: Which riots? When to re-enact? What riots will we re-enact? London's history offers a wide range of riots to chose from, these ones are just a few possibilities, feel free to send in your own suggestions. The Peasant Revolt (1381) Jack Cade's rebellion, 1450 South Sea Bubble Riots, 1720 Gin Riots 1743 St George's Field or Wilkite Riots 1758 Gordon Riots or Great Liberty Riot 1780 Spa Fields Riot, 1816 Reform League Riots, 1866 Bloody Sunday 1887 Suffragettes, 1914 Hunger March, 1932 The Battle of Cable Street, 1936 Notting Hill, 1958 Brixton Riots, 1981 Broadwater Farm, 1985 Wapping, 1986-87 Poll Tax riots, 1990 Criminal Justice Bill, 1994 J-18 Brixton 1996 / 2001 May Day 2000 / 2001 / 2002 And so on When to re-enact? Artangel and Channel 4 chose to re-enact the Battle of Orgreave on the anniversary of the original conflict. We could do this too, but there are other options. To list them, we can re-enact a riot on a) the anniversary of the day the riot took place b) on another day or c) whenever we want to. The possibilities are endless. For example, if we staged a re-enactment of May Day 2000 on May Day 2003, would people notice it was a re-enactment or would they think it was that year's May Day riot? And if we told them, and if the next year we re-enacted June 18 1999 on May Day 2004 would people notice the discrepancy? What to re-enact? One of the advantages of re-enactments is that although one should try to be historically accurate and not change what actually happened, you can decide where to begin and end the re-enactment. For example, we could re-enact the part of November 30th 1999 when the police van got set on fire, but not re-enact the part where we had to stand surrounded by lines of riot police for hours on end without a toilet, or we can re-enact May Day 2000 but not re-enact the aftermath in which many people got sent to prison. And of course we can re-enact the Poll Tax riots without the threat of a court summons for non-payment. Practical concerns. Having read their Rules of Association it appears that the London Riot Re-enactment Society may not be eligible to join the National Association of Re-enactment Societies. Re-enactors are however invited to join the LRRS, our rules do not exclude you. A knowledge of historical costume and weaponry AND some experience of rioting is the ideal combination for a LRRS member, but members can join with knowledge of one, or the other, or neither. After all, many participants in the riots that we are re-enacting had not a clue what they were up to, and we want historical accuracy, do we not? Neither will we, like some re-enactment societies, impose strict rules against the consumption of alcohol. Most of the top riots involve a bit of drinking. If, for example, you are involved in a re-enactment of the Gordon riots and you are very good at acting drunk for days on end, then feel free to just drink water, but if you think that only gin will do the trick, then drink gin, and we won't ask where you got it from. Other re-enactment societies also point out that it is necessary to ask permission to use land for re-enactments. We are in the rather more complex situation of using London for re-enactments, therefore there are inherent difficulties in asking, or even informing, the relevant bodies of our plans. For example, if we asked the Corporation of London if we could use the City for a week or so to re-enact the Gordon riots they might charge us some considerable sum of money, which we don't have, and there is really not much point in writing to Mercedes Benz about using their showroom as part of a June 18 re-enactment, or to the monarch about our desire to sack the Tower dressed as Wat Tyler's army. It may be best to just go ahead and re-enact. Hopefully no one will mind. The First Riot Re-enactment International If you live not in London but in another town or city, maybe Oldham, or Seattle, and therefore cannot take part in LRRS activities, why not start your own affiliated Riot Re-enactment Society. Remember, the most important re-enactor is the one in the mirror. Rural re-enactment Riots are usually associated with urban life, but it doesn't have to be that way. If you live in a rural area you can still be part of the riot re-enactment movement. Look back in your history, there has always been a ruling class, and there has always been a resistance to their rule. Maybe you could re-enact a local peasant uprising, a bread riot, or the more recent fuel blockades. Or if you really want to surprise us, maybe YOU could dress up as Wat Tyler's army and march on London. Our re-enactment will be as global as capital Once the riot re-enactment movement has snowballed we will begin the lead up to our greatest plan, the first World Riot Re-enactment Day. Each affiliated group will re-enact a riot in their own area simultaneously. The time difference won't matter, you can riot by day, by night, or for several days and nights. Imagine that, the Battle of Seattle, the February Revolution, the Storming of the Bastille, the Brixton uprising, the break-in party at Hackney Town Hall and Wat Tyler's army ransacking the Tower, all at the same time. The Rapid Re-enactment Force After a bit of practice expert riot re-enactors could form a Rapid Re-enactment Force which re-enacts riots immediately after they have happened (or even AS they happen), causing things to spiral out of control! Re-enacting the riots of the future We could re-enact riots that haven't happened yet. Or ones that might never happen. Fictitious riots We could re-enact riots that so far exist only in books or films. One idea would be to re-enact the riot at the end of Seaton Point. It involves police, bailiffs, vampires and a portal to hell under a tower block in Hackney. If you have any other suggestions for fictitious London riots to re-enact please send them in. Join us now, or just send us your views: Email anathematician2002 AT yahoo.co.uk subject: AntiCapitalist | Chaos | Commons | Insurgency | Psychogeography | Space | Urbanism
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