British Culture After Empire

British Culture After Empire

Race, Decolonisation and Migration Since 1945

Liburd, Liam; Parker, Emma; Doble, Josh

Manchester University Press

12/2024

296

Mole

9781526182548

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

Descrição não disponível.
Foreword: Living in the bush of ghosts - Elleke Boehmer
Introduction: Rhodesia and the 'Rivers of Blood' - Josh Doble, Liam J. Liburd and Emma Parker

Part I: Institutions of empire
1 'Bloomsbury bazaar': Daljit Nagra at the diasporic museum - John McLeod
2 Anthropology at the end of empire - Katherine Ambler
3 'He is not a "racist" but should not be appointed director of LSE': The impact of colonial universities on the University of London - Dongkyung Shin

Part II: Writing identity, conflict and class
4 Beyond experience: British anti-racist non-fiction after empire - Dominic Davies
5 Empire, war and class in Graham Swift's Last Orders (1996) - Ed Dodson

Part III: Racial others, national memory
6 White against empire: Immigration, decolonisation and Britain's radical right, 1954-1967 - Liam J. Liburd
7 Racism, redistribution, redress: The Royal Historical Society and Race, Ethnicity & Equality in UK History: A Report and Resource for Change - Shahmima Akhtar
8 Exemplar empires: Battles over imperial memory in contemporary Britain - Astrid Rasch

Part IV: At home in postcolonial Britain
9 Empire, security and citizenship in Arab British fiction - Tasnim Qutait
10 Black, beautiful and essentially British: African Caribbean women, belonging and the creation of Black British beauty spaces in Britain (c. 1948-1990) - Mobeen Hussain
11 Convivial cultures and the commodification of otherness in London nightlife in the 1970s and 1980s - Steve Bentel
12 Tribe Arts, Tribe Talks - Josh Doble, Liam J. Liburd, Emma Parker, Samran Rathore and Tajpal Rathore

Afterword: Disorder and displacement - Bill Schwarz

Index -- .
class politics; cultural memory; decolonisation; imperial nostalgia; institutions; political activism; postcolonial literature; race and ethnic identity; social history; the British Empire