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Anti-racism in Britain
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12 November 2024

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / 20th Century, Social and cultural history, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Race & Ethnic Relations, Racism and racial discrimination / Anti-racism
'This brilliant collection captures the voice of a new generation of scholars committed to decolonising modern British history. It offers a powerful corrective to one-dimension understandings of racism and its resistance, past and present. We see the rich diversity of efforts to resist white supremacy in Britain since the 1880s; the ideological limits and the liberal paternalism of some forms of anti-racist politics; and the points of fracture, the lost solidarities, that remain with us to this day.'
- Camilla Schofield, Lecturer in Politics and Contemporary History, King's College London
'This is a remarkably rich collection, which centres the activities of Britain’s racialized citizens and colonial subjects in building enduring and powerful anti-racist movements. The breadth of historical study and the seriousness with which the authors work to bring these anti-racist movements to life are second to none. Anti-racism in Britain will surely become a landmark collection for the field.'
- Rob Waters, Senior Lecturer in Modern British History, Queen Mary University of London
'This is an important and timely collection. It profoundly deepens our understanding of histories of anti-racist action and thought in Britain.'
- Dr Saima Nasar, Senior Lecturer in the History of Africa and its Diasporas, University of Bristol
Saffron East is Lecturer in Interdisciplinary Humanities at King's College London
Grace Redhead is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Exeter
Theo Williams is a Lecturer in Social History at the University of Glasgow
Introduction: Anti-racism in Britain: Traditions, histories and trajectories – Saffron East, Grace Redhead and Theo Williams
Part I: Domestic, imperial and global anti-racist alliances and encounters
1 Countering racial discrimination in Britain, 1880s-1913 – David Killingray
2 From racist humanitarianism to colonial human rights: The British Congo Reform Movement and the complicated history of (anti-)racism – Felix Lösing
3 George Orwell, Pan-Africanism, and reconciling anti-imperialism with ‘Britishness’ – Theo Williams
4 British anti-racism in Australia: Exploring the nexus through the anti-racist activism of Jessie Street, 1950–60 – Alison Holland
Part II: Anti-racism and the making of post-imperial Britain
5 Celebrating African culture in the North East of England, 1930s–40s – Vanessa Mongey
6 British Jews and the Race Relations Acts – Joseph Finlay
7 South Asian political Blackness in Britain: Lessons and limitations of anti-racist solidarity – Saffron East
8 ‘Unfinished activisms’: From Black self-help to mutual aid organising today – Sophia Siddiqui
Part III: Anti-racism, memory and identity
9 Memory, multiculturalism and anti-racism in East London, 1990-2006 – Finn Gleeson
10 Tartan inclusivity or workers’ internationalism? The St Andrew’s Day Anti-Racism March and Rally in Scotland – Talat Ahmed
11 ‘Martin Luther King fought for a colour-blind society’: African American civil rights in UK political discourse – Megan Hunt
Afterword – Priyamvada Gopal
Index