Mixed Race Britain in The Twentieth Century

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216x153x36 mm
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Chamion Caballero is Visiting Senior Fellow at the London School of Economics. She has published widely on issues of racial mixing and mixedness and along with Peter Aspinall and Bradley Lincoln is Co-Founder and Director of the Mix-d Museum, an online archive recording and sharing the history of racial mixing in Britain.

Peter J. Aspinall is Emeritus Reader at the University of Kent, UK. His publications include 75 papers on race and ethnicity and several books, including Mixed Race Identities (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013). He was ONS National Convenor for the ethnicity question in the ONS 2001 Census Development Programme.

Presents a comprehensive history of racial mixing in Britain during the twentieth century
1. Introduction.Section 1: 1900-1939: The march to moral condemnation.2. 'Disharmony of Physical, Mental and Temperamental Qualities': Race Crossing, Miscegenation and the Eugenics Movement.3. Mixed Race Communities and Social Stability.4. 'Unnatural Alliances' and 'Poor Half-Castes': Representations of Racial Mixing and Mixedness.5. Fitting In and Standing Out: Lived Experiences of Everyday Interraciality.Section 2: 1939-1949: The Second World War - The Early Post-War Years.6. 'Tan Yanks', 'Loose Women' and 'Brown Babies': Official Concerns About Racial Mixing and Mixedness During the Second World War.7. 'Undesirable Element': The Repatriation of Chinese Sailors and Break up of Mixed Families in the 1940s.8. Convivality, Hostility and Ordinariness: Everyday Lives and Emotions in the Second World War and Early Post-War Years.Section 3: 1950-1979: The Era of Mass Immigration.9. Redefining Race: UNESCO and the Wane of the Eugenics Movement.10. The Era of Mass Immigration and Widespread Population Mixing.11. 'Would You Let Your Daughter Marry a Black Man?' - Representation and Lived Experiences in the Post-War PeriodSection 4: 1980-2000: The Move to Social and Official Acceptance and Recognition.12. Social Acceptance, Official Recognition and Membership of the British Collectivity.13. A Postscript to the Twentieth Century: Mainstream and Celebrated Limitations, and Counter-Narratives

This book explores the overlooked history of racial mixing in Britain during the course of the twentieth century, a period in which there was considerable and influential public debate on the meanings and implications of intimately crossing racial boundaries.

Based on research that formed the foundations of the British television series Mixed Britannia, the authors draw on a range of firsthand accounts and archival material to compare 'official' accounts of racial mixing and mixedness with those told by mixed race people, couples and families themselves.

Mixed Race Britain in The Twentieth Century shows that alongside the more familiarly recognised experiences of social bigotry and racial prejudice there can also be glimpsed constant threads of tolerance, acceptance, inclusion and 'ordinariness'. It presents a more complex and multifaceted history of mixed race Britain than is typically assumed, one that adds to the growing picture of the longstanding diversity and difference that is, and always has been, an ordinary and everyday feature of British life. 

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