Culture Wars, the National Trust, and ‘Green Heritage’ in Britain
Data
2025Autore
Moody, Jessica <Historical Studies, School of Humanities, University of Bristol, 11 Woodland Road, Bristol, BS8 1TB, UK>
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Mostra tutti i dati dell'itemAbstract
The National Trust, Europe’s largest conservation charity, found themselves in the midst of a bitterly
unfolding ‘culture war’ over public histories of slavery,
empire and colonialism in Britain following the publication
of a report outlining connections between these histories
and properties in their care in September 2020. The reaction that followed was largely spearheaded by Britain’s
right-wing press, an internal pressure group, and several
Conservative MPs. The debates focused on the National
Trust’s perceived purpose (of ‘conservation’ not ‘politics’),
that publishing these connections somehow brought
‘shame’ on great institutions and families, and that doing so
was part of a ‘woke’ and highly politicized agenda. This
article introduces this contested moment in the long and
dissonant public memory of slavery and empire in Britain
and argues that considering alternative forms of interpretation through green heritage and ‘Plant Public History’ has
potential to expand public understandings of these histories and provide ‘alternative ways in’ to thinking about
otherwise marginalized stories.
