African and Caribbean people in Britain : a history / Hakim Adi.
Publisher: London : Allen Lane, an imprint of Penguin Books, 2022Description: xi, 674 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (black and white and colour).Content type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780241583821.Subject(s): Africans -- Great Britain -- History

Item type | Current library | Class number | Status | Barcode | |
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Book | House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey | 941.00496 ADI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 021781 |
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941 YOU The Scottish Parliament : | 941.004914 VIS Asians in Britain : 400 years of history / | 941.00496 ABR Black Victorians : hidden in history / | 941.00496 ADI African and Caribbean people in Britain : a history / | 941.00496 BLA Black British history : new perspectives / | 941.00496 FRY Staying power : the history of black people in Britain / | 941.00496 FRY Black people in the British empire / |
The early African presence -- African Tudors and Stuarts -- That infamous traffic -- Freedom struggles -- Struggles for the rights of all -- War, riot and resistance : 1897-1919 -- The interwar years -- The Second World War and after -- The post-war world -- Black liberation -- Into the new century.
"Despite the best efforts of researchers and campaigners, there remains today a steadfast tendency to reduce the history of African and Caribbean people in Britain to a simple story: it is one that begins in 1948 with the arrival of a single ship, the Empire Windrush, and continues mostly apart from a distinct British history, overlapping only on occasion amid grotesque injustice or pioneering protest. Yet, as acclaimed historian Hakim Adi demonstrates, from the very beginning, from the moment humans first stood on this rainy isle, there have been African and Caribbean men and women set at Britain's heart. Libyan legionaries patrolled Hadrian's Wall while Rome's first 'African Emperor' died in York. In Elizabethan England, 'Black Tudors' served in the land's most eminent households while intrepid African explorers helped Sir Francis Drake to circumnavigate the globe. And, as Britain became a major colonial and commercial power, it was African and Caribbean people who led the radical struggle for freedom - a struggle which raged throughout the twentieth century and continues today in Black Lives Matter campaigns. Charting a course through British history with an unobscured view of the actions of African and Caribbean people, Adi reveals how much our greatest collective achievements - universal suffrage, our victory over fascism, the forging of the NHS - owe to these men and women, and how, in understanding our history in these terms, we are more able to fully understand our present moment."-- Taken from dust jacket.