“…Within such a context, our previous work in this field has highlighted and challenged the ways that educational marketisation exacerbates competitiveness, elitism and exclusionary educational practices (Saltmarsh, 2007;Youdell, 2004). In particular, we have been interested in how the promotions, marketing and impression management practices of elite schools discursively constitute their students as winners in the competitive educational climate, and in so doing simultaneously reinscribe the status and prestige of such schools (Drew, 2013;Saltmarsh, 2007Saltmarsh, , 2008Gottschall, Edgeworth, Hutchesson, Wardman, & Saltmarsh, 2010;Wardman, Hutchesson, Gottschall, Drew & Saltmarsh, 2010;Wardman, Gottschall, Drew, Hutchesson & Saltmarsh, 2013;Symes, 1998). This work overall has maintained a sustained focus on the ways that gender, race, geographic location and socioeconomic privilege are invoked in school promotions in the service of competitive educational and social hierarchies.…”