3 research outputs found
Echoes of protest: untold stories of the 1984ā1985 UK Minersā Strike
This journal article will take a look at a collaborative project by artist/filmmaker Esther Johnson and filmmaker/writer Debbie Ballin titled Echoes of Protest. This research investigates the legacy of being involved in significant protest movements from a childās perspective and seeks to understand the role protest can play in the lives of children, and to explore its aftermath.
This article will draw upon oral testimony transcriptions and photography undertaken for this project to highlight a perspective of the 1984-85 UK Minersā Strike that has seldom been explored. The stories collected are from adults remembering what it was like to grow up as a child during the Strike. They articulate the experience with a maturity they may have been unable to express at the time. The text will follow the research methodology, findings, discuss the editing process and invite contributors to reflect on their participation.
Key words
archive; cross-disciplinary research; documentary; exhibition; interviewing process; memory; Minersā Strike; museums; oral testimony; photograph
The People's Echo. Memories of the 1984-8 Miners' Strike Christmas 2016
12-page Newspaper published to accompany
A share of a pensionerās Christmas āBonusā
exhibition at the
National Coal Mining Museum for England
12 November 2016 ā 18 January 201
A share of a pensionerās Christmas āBonusā
A share of a pensionerās Christmas āBonusā is an exhibition of work that has been created as part of collaborative research. The exhibition consists of:
Ā· 26ā² audio work by Esther Johnson and Debbie Ballin
Ā· A photographic series by Esther Johnson
Ā· Selection of artefacts, from the Peopleās History Museum archive, curated by Johnson and Ballin
āWe got presents that were donatedā¦. I got a little cheap plastic watch and a coat that my auntie had made, but I just didnāt even care ācos I was having so much fun.ā
ā Sam, Minerās Daughter aged 15 during the strike
The initial element of this research is an exhibition titled A share of a pensionerās Christmas āBonusā.
Itās Christmas 1984. Sam, Gayle, Jayne and Craig are the children of striking miners. This is the story of how acts of generosity by total strangers made Christmas possible for them that year, and what it was like for them to grow up in the shadow of the Minersā Strike.
This exhibition bears witness to their untold stories, and includes artifacts from the Peopleās History Museum archive, and a newly commissioned audio-visual work.
Exhibition Background
During the Minersā Strike in December 1984, the Thatcher government paid pensioners the same Ā£10 Christmas heating bonus they had received since 1972. A nationwide appeal, in several national newspapers, invited pensioners to give up their bonus in support of the striking miners.
Hundredās of pounds worth of bonuses were donated to support this cause. Thanks to remarkable acts of generosity many children of Minersā and their families were able to celebrate Christmas that year.
Project Background
A share of a pensionerās Christmas āBonusā is part of a larger research project titled Echoes of Protest, investigating the legacy of being involved in significant protest movements from a childās perspective.
The project aims to understand the role protest can play in the politicization of children and the long-term impact of its aftermath on their lives