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Death and denial in the city: Making sense of London Bridge and Grenfell

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  • Owen D Thomas
  • Victoria M Basham
  • Rhys Crilley

Abstract

In the wake of violent events comes a rush to make sense of what happened. Sensemaking matters because it bounds political possibilities, producing knowledge about what caused the violence, who is accountable, and whether society should change to prevent a recurrence. This paper explores sensemaking through an intertextual discourse analysis of elite, print, and social media responses to two violent events in the global city of London in June 2017: the London Bridge terrorist attack and the Grenfell Tower fire. For some, global cities like London are imagined as inclusive and post-imperial: a place of safety and security. Others regard global cities like London as sites of intensive racialisation, inequality, and hierarchy: a political order that produces insecurity. Scholarly debates suggest that public sensemaking could generate alternative political registers to contest the established narratives that sustain violent orders. Yet, our analysis reveals that, in this instance, intertextual sensemaking in a social media age overwhelmingly reflected and reproduced existing socio-political order. Through discourses of denial, the prosperous global city of London emerged as a place where violence might occur but not a violent place . We analyse three discourses of denial: (1) that the events failed to reflect ‘who we are’, (2) that ‘others’ were to blame, and (3) a fatalistic acceptance that some violence ‘is what it is’. Despite academic optimism about public sensemaking, we show denial functions to externalise the causes of violence from socio-political and spatial orders, limiting the scope for change.

Suggested Citation

  • Owen D Thomas & Victoria M Basham & Rhys Crilley, 2025. "Death and denial in the city: Making sense of London Bridge and Grenfell," Environment and Planning C, , vol. 43(7), pages 1332-1349, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:envirc:v:43:y:2025:i:7:p:1332-1349
    DOI: 10.1177/23996544251326476
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Jo Beall, 2006. "Cities, terrorism and development," Journal of International Development, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 18(1), pages 105-120.
    2. Joanne Murphy & Sara McDowell, 2023. "Making sense of segregation: Transitional thinking and contested space," Urban Studies, Urban Studies Journal Limited, vol. 60(14), pages 2835-2851, November.
    3. Jonathan Leader Maynard, 2014. "Rethinking the Role of Ideology in Mass Atrocities," Terrorism and Political Violence, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 26(5), pages 821-841.
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