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A History of Black and Asian Writing in Britain
The first extended study of black and Asian writing in Britain, now updated and available in paperback.
C. L. Innes (Author)
9780521719681, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 14 August 2008
340 pages, 5 b/w illus.
22.8 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm, 0.55 kg
'With the panorama of writing it unfolds and its excellent scholarship, this study is essential reading. It belongs in every university library.' Zeitschrift für Anglistik unk Amerikanistik
Now updated and available in paperback, this is the first extended study of black and Asian writing in Britain over the last 250 years. Beginning with authors who arrived as immigrants or slaves in the mid-eighteenth century, Innes includes a detailed discussion of works that were often enormously popular in their own time but are almost unknown to contemporary readers. Innes's fascinating study reveals a history of vigorous and fertile interaction between black, Asian and white intellectuals and communities, and an enormously rich and varied literary culture which was already in existence before the post-war efflorescence of black and Asian writing. Utilising a wealth of archival material, Innes examines their work as part of an acceptance of and challenge to British cultural and ideological discourses. This volume offers a rich historical background for understanding contemporary British multicultural society and culture and will be of interest to literary and cultural historians.
Chronological table of historical and literary events
List of illustrations
Introduction
Interchapter: first encounters
1. Eighteenth-century letters and narratives: Ignatius Sancho, Olaudah Equiano, and Dean Mahomed
2. Speaking truth for freedom and justice: Mary Prince and Robert Wedderburn
Interchapter: the imperial century
3. Querying race, gender and genre: nineteenth-century narratives of escape
4. Travellers and reformers: Mary Seacole and B. M. Malabari
5. Connecting cultures: Cornelia and Alice Sorabji
Interchapter: ending empire
6. Duse Mohamed Ali, anti-imperial journals, and black and Asian publishing
7. Subaltern voices and the construction of a global culture
8. Epilogue
Notes to chapters
Notes on writers
Bibliography.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: fiction, novelists & prose writers [DSK], Literary studies: from c 1900 - [DSBH]
