Blackness in Britain

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Adam Elliott-Cooper
African Caribbean
African Caribbean Communities
African Caribbean Women
Black African Women
Black Britain
Black British
Black British feminism
Black British intellectual scholarship
Black Europe
Black Femininity
Black feminism
Black Mixed Race
Black Studies
Black Theology
Black Women
Blackness
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Cato Street Conspiracy
Dancehall Culture
Diane Chilangwa Farmer
diaspora studies
Dionne Taylor
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Grime Music
Helen Cousins
Hip Hop
Icarus Girl
intersectionality
Jamaican Language
Jamaican Patois
Jenny Douglas
Jose Lingna Nafafe
Kehinde Andrews
Larger Female Body
Lisa Palmer
Martin Glynn
Monique Charles
Naomi A. Watson
Nathaniel Coleman
Nicole Andrews
Nicole M. Jackson
Patois
postcolonial theory
race and education
race and ethnicity
racism
Remi Salisbury
Robert Beckford
Shakira Lewis
Sonya 'Judah' Griffith
state violence research
Tony Talburt
UK Population
UK Prison Population
UK Private Sector
William Cuffay
Young Black British Women
Young Black Women

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138840638
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Apr 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Black Studies is a hugely important, and yet undervalued, academic field of enquiry that is marked by its disciplinary absence and omission from academic curricula in Britain. There is a long and rich history of research on Blackness and Black populations in Britain. However Blackness in Britain has too often been framed through the lens of racialised deficits, constructed as both marginal and pathological.

Blackness in Britain attends to and grapples with the absence of Black Studies in Britain and the parallel crisis of Black marginality in British society. It begins to map the field of Black Studies scholarship from a British context, by collating new and established voices from scholars writing about Blackness in Britain. Split into five parts, it examines:

  • Black studies and the challenge of the Black British intellectual;
  • Revolution, resistance and state violence;
  • Blackness and belonging;
  • exclusion and inequality in education;
  • experiences of Black women and the gendering of Blackness in Britain.

This interdisciplinary collection represents a landmark in building Black Studies in British academia, presenting key debates about Black experiences in relation to Britain, Black Europe and the wider Black diaspora. With contributions from across various disciplines including sociology, human geography, medical sociology, cultural studies, education studies, post-colonial English literature, history, and criminology, the book will be essential reading for scholars and students of the multi- and inter-disciplinary area of Black Studies.

Kehinde Andrews is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Birmingham City University.

Lisa Palmer is Lecturer in Sociology at Birmingham City University.