Thesis advisor: Peter WeilerThis dissertation examines the careers and cultural productions of West Indian artists and entertainers working in London between 1945 and 1965, a period of large-scale West Indian migration to Britain. It argues that these artists espoused a collective cultural politics that was both ethnically aware and actively integrationist. Their work emphasized the historic cultural ties between the "mother country" and the Caribbean colonies, but did so in an effort to challenge prevailing media depictions of New Commonwealth migration as an unwanted foreign deluge. As a result, these migrant artists were among the first to express the potential of Commonwealth multiculturalism in Britain. Unlike many post-war histories ...
The article offers a conjunctural analysis of three 'moments' in the post-war black visual arts in t...
This dissertation argues that British modernist fiction and early West Indian postcolonial fiction w...
textThis dissertation examines the production of culture among Indo-Caribbean communities in New Yor...
At the turn of the nineteenth century, Britishness was integral to the culture of colonialism that p...
Beginning in 1935, African and Indian youth, women and men who comprised the sugar plantation labor ...
Southall, located on the outskirts of West London, was transformed by immigration from the New Commo...
This dissertation shows that the migration of mixed-race individuals from the Caribbean to Britain b...
This dissertation considers the significance of empire for indentured labor emigration from India. T...
Britain is the country with a long tradition of immigration. Over many years it witnessed the arriva...
This dissertation brings together artists living and working in the East End of London since World W...
This thesis examines the performance of Indian classical dance in the contemporary 'diaspora space' ...
During the three decades between the end of World War I and 1950, African and West Indian scholars, ...
Focusing on British opera, this dissertation reassesses the relationship between British national cu...
This dissertation is a study of British theater, publishing, and broadcasting in East and West Afric...
UnrestrictedMy dissertation " Lead Man Holler: Harry Belafonte and the Culture Industry," looks at ...
The article offers a conjunctural analysis of three 'moments' in the post-war black visual arts in t...
This dissertation argues that British modernist fiction and early West Indian postcolonial fiction w...
textThis dissertation examines the production of culture among Indo-Caribbean communities in New Yor...
At the turn of the nineteenth century, Britishness was integral to the culture of colonialism that p...
Beginning in 1935, African and Indian youth, women and men who comprised the sugar plantation labor ...
Southall, located on the outskirts of West London, was transformed by immigration from the New Commo...
This dissertation shows that the migration of mixed-race individuals from the Caribbean to Britain b...
This dissertation considers the significance of empire for indentured labor emigration from India. T...
Britain is the country with a long tradition of immigration. Over many years it witnessed the arriva...
This dissertation brings together artists living and working in the East End of London since World W...
This thesis examines the performance of Indian classical dance in the contemporary 'diaspora space' ...
During the three decades between the end of World War I and 1950, African and West Indian scholars, ...
Focusing on British opera, this dissertation reassesses the relationship between British national cu...
This dissertation is a study of British theater, publishing, and broadcasting in East and West Afric...
UnrestrictedMy dissertation " Lead Man Holler: Harry Belafonte and the Culture Industry," looks at ...
The article offers a conjunctural analysis of three 'moments' in the post-war black visual arts in t...
This dissertation argues that British modernist fiction and early West Indian postcolonial fiction w...
textThis dissertation examines the production of culture among Indo-Caribbean communities in New Yor...