Archives of Intimacy

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A01=Nadine Attewell
Asian history
Asian studies
Author_Nadine Attewell
British empire
British history
Category=NHD
Category=NHF
Category=NHTB
Chinese diaspora
Chinese migration
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
gender
Global Asia
Hong Kong
immigration
interracial intimacy
interracial mixing
intimacy
Liverpool
London
migration
racial mixing
sexuality
social history
UK
working class

Product details

  • ISBN 9781503647107
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Stanford University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book offers a rich and innovative study of multiracial social worlds in early-twentieth-century London, Liverpool, and Hong Kong – three port cities linked by their importance to global British shipping networks and circuits of Chinese migration. In these cities, Chinese, Black, South Asian and European people came together to foster multiracial communities which have been largely forgotten, remembered only through sensationalist fictions that reflected white anxieties about racial mixing. Nadine Attewell considers these vibrant multiracial worlds through the eyes of those who knew them best: people of mixed Chinese descent, for whom interracial intimacies were features of everyday life.

Mobilizing a wide range of archival materials, including photographs, community and family histories, and wartime intelligence reports, Attewell reconstructs the social experiences of people like Vera Leung, a working-class woman of Irish and Chinese descent growing up in Liverpool's interwar Chinatown, and Percy Chang, a Jamaican man of Chinese and African descent with a wide social network in Hong Kong. Rather than centering identity as the focus of mixed-race people's struggles, she asks what they did and with whom. Drawing on queer and feminist scholarship and integrating British, Asian, and diasporic histories, Attewell presents new ways of thinking about the everyday meanings of interracial intimacy, and practices of relation and survival under global conditions of colonial capitalist rule.

Nadine Attewell is Associate Professor of Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies and Global Asia at Simon Fraser University. She is the author of Better Britons: Reproduction, National Identity, and the Afterlife of Empire (2014).

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