Routledge Handbook on Antiracism in Global Historical Perspective
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Product details
- ISBN 9781032788531
- Weight: 1250g
- Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
- Publication Date: 22 Apr 2026
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
This Handbook is the first multidisciplinary anthology of research on antiracism in global historical perspective. It demonstrates the importance of a historical lens for understanding the deep lineages of antiracism and reveals the myriad ways—transracial, transnational, and transhistorical—that antiracism has shaped world history.
Drawing on case studies from Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, South America, and North America from the eighteenth century to the present, this volume situates antiracism across a variety of temporal, geographical, and ideological contexts that span the globe. By highlighting the perspectives of racially marginalized individuals and communities, it showcases the distinctiveness and importance of key thinkers, ideas, and methodologies in regional and national contexts. Further, by recovering complex histories, including memories and legacies, of antiracism, this Handbook illustrates how faultlines of race, class, and gender informed internal debates, priorities and outcomes. It emphasizes the creativity and labour of antiracist activism at the local and international levels.
The Routledge Handbook on Antiracism in Global Historical Perspective ultimately underscores the diverse genealogies of antiracism and its transnational networks of political solidarity in order to contribute to future research and teaching as well as political praxis in the present. A vital resource for students, teachers, and activists alike, it presents a synthesis of some of the best work on antiracism to date by leading scholars, both emerging and internationally recognized, across the humanities and social sciences.
Alison Holland is an Associate Professor in the School of Humanities at Macquarie University, Sydney. She has published two monographs: Just Relations. The Story of Mary Bennett’s Crusade for Aboriginal Rights (2015) and Breaking the Silence. Aboriginal Defenders and the Settler State, 1905–1939 (2019). She is the editor of Rethinking the Racial Moment. Essays on the Colonial Encounter (2012). She is currently writing a history of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission and is on the editorial board of Black Histories: Dialogues.
Christopher J. Lee is an independent scholar who has published twelve books, including Making a World after Empire: The Bandung Moment and Its Political Afterlives (2010, rev. 2nd edition 2019), Unreasonable Histories: Nativism, Multiracial Lives, and the Genealogical Imagination in British Africa (2014), Frantz Fanon: Toward a Revolutionary Humanism (2015), Kwame Anthony Appiah (2021), and Alex La Guma: The Exile Years, 1966–1985 (2024). He is currently the lead editor of the journal Safundi.
