Taylor’s Reviews > A Flag Worth Dying For: The Power and Politics of National Symbols (2) > Status Update
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Taylor
is on page 244 of 304
Chapter 8 was pretty good, I liked learning about the similarities between some flags , as well as the Brazilian flag but I would have liked to have more about “order and progress”
Argentina and falklands is also pretty cool but I think they could have spent more time on this
— Jun 25, 2022 02:25PM
Argentina and falklands is also pretty cool but I think they could have spent more time on this
Taylor
is on page 209 of 304
Chapter 7 was pretty good I especially liked the story about nigerias flag as well as that of Ethiopia and it’s connections to Rastafarianism and marcus Garvey
— Jun 18, 2022 05:54PM
Taylor
is on page 186 of 304
Honestly chapter 6 was just okay I kind of just skimmed through most of it
— Jun 18, 2022 05:33PM
Taylor
is on page 154 of 304
Chapter 5 was …. I just don’t think it was necessary to make basically a whole chapter about Palestinian groups labelled under “flags of fear” like there’s other terror groups in the world and this just rubbed me the wrong way
— Jun 18, 2022 05:03PM
Taylor
is on page 131 of 304
Chapter 4 was pretty good. I particularly enjoyed understand the contestation around using religious symbols on flags
— Jun 16, 2022 06:55PM
Taylor
is on page 103 of 304
I actually really liked chapter 3, I really liked learning about the Russian flags (hammer and sickle) as well as the association between flags and extreme right wing groups, which has been heightened by the refugee crisis that happened in the 2010s
— Jun 16, 2022 06:25PM
Taylor
is on page 63 of 304
I really mostly skimmed over chapter 2, except for the parts about colonialism and it being used as a far right / fascist object
— Jun 09, 2022 06:48PM
Taylor
is on page 36 of 304
Chapter one was good, it went over how the US views the American flag in a sort of religious sense.
Burning a flag as free speech.
Instilling a sense of hope.
Flown during wars.
— Jun 09, 2022 06:27PM
Burning a flag as free speech.
Instilling a sense of hope.
Flown during wars.

