In January 2003 Enoch Powell's personal archive was opened to the public. The release shed new light on the nature of Powell's thought on immigration, and in particular, his reasons for making the so-called ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech of 1968. Historians have suggested that Powell's primary concern was a post-imperialist desire to sever all links with the New Commonwealth. However, papers written immediately after Powell's time in India (1943–6) reveal that his objections to immigration were established long before he abandoned his fierce love of empire in 1954. These objections were rooted in a seemingly liberal commitment to national homogeneity as a prerequisite for democracy. The imagery, reasoning, and political conte...
Hailed for its 'healing influence' in the most troubled dominion in the post-war years, the royal vi...
India @ 70: LSE India Summit 2017 will feature panels discussing concerns relevant to India’s future...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
The 50th anniversary of Enoch Powell’s ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech brought back into public debate one ...
Enoch Powell's legacy continues to haunt British politics, and especially the Conservative Party, wh...
According to Edward Said, ‘colonialism’ means regional invasion and settlement (2003, s.8). Post Co...
At the end of January, Professor Susheila Nasta gave a talk on how Indians mingling in intellectual ...
Cette thèse étudie le début de carrière d’Enoch Powell de 1946 à 1968 et analyse l’évolution de son ...
This article considers the 1967–1969 Wolverhampton Transport turban dispute in the context of increa...
Immigration has been and still is a major policy issue in the United Kingdom. A prediction into how ...
In September 1931, Mohandas Gandhi traveled to Lancashire, heart of the English textile industry, wh...
The name of Enoch Powell provokes consternation in many on both the left and right of British politi...
This paper presents new ways of thinking about both the spatial relationality of a political event, ...
The movement in India to abolish indentured emigration to tropical colonies (particularly Fiji, Trin...
This paper connects the rise of Sikh Fundamentalist movements in the 1980s, which sparked a widespre...
Hailed for its 'healing influence' in the most troubled dominion in the post-war years, the royal vi...
India @ 70: LSE India Summit 2017 will feature panels discussing concerns relevant to India’s future...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
The 50th anniversary of Enoch Powell’s ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech brought back into public debate one ...
Enoch Powell's legacy continues to haunt British politics, and especially the Conservative Party, wh...
According to Edward Said, ‘colonialism’ means regional invasion and settlement (2003, s.8). Post Co...
At the end of January, Professor Susheila Nasta gave a talk on how Indians mingling in intellectual ...
Cette thèse étudie le début de carrière d’Enoch Powell de 1946 à 1968 et analyse l’évolution de son ...
This article considers the 1967–1969 Wolverhampton Transport turban dispute in the context of increa...
Immigration has been and still is a major policy issue in the United Kingdom. A prediction into how ...
In September 1931, Mohandas Gandhi traveled to Lancashire, heart of the English textile industry, wh...
The name of Enoch Powell provokes consternation in many on both the left and right of British politi...
This paper presents new ways of thinking about both the spatial relationality of a political event, ...
The movement in India to abolish indentured emigration to tropical colonies (particularly Fiji, Trin...
This paper connects the rise of Sikh Fundamentalist movements in the 1980s, which sparked a widespre...
Hailed for its 'healing influence' in the most troubled dominion in the post-war years, the royal vi...
India @ 70: LSE India Summit 2017 will feature panels discussing concerns relevant to India’s future...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...