Since the early Eighties, and up until this day, the Ghanaian born artist, film and video-maker John Akomfrah sets out to intervene in the cultural debate raging all over Britain about black identity and its representation. As a member of the London based Black Audio Film Collective (BAFC), and later in his solo career, Akomfrah creates a counter-narrative around the gap between the dominant discourses on ethnicity and “Britishness” and what was, and is, intimately felt and experienced by the so-called “post-migrants”. Taking Stuart Hall’s statement quoted in the title as a visual enactment, and referring to his theoretical work as well as to his biography, the essay will mainly focus on a trilogy of works that has a direct connection with...