ABSTRACT

This volume looks at Britain since 1948 – the year when the Empire Windrush brought a group of 492 hopeful Caribbean immigrants to the United Kingdom. “Post-war Britain” may still be the most common label attached to studies in contemporary British history, but the contributors to this book believe that “post-Windrush Britain” has an explanatory power which is equally useful. The objective is to study the Windrush generation and Enoch Powell’s now infamous speech not only in their original historical context but also as a key element in the political, social and cultural make-up of today’s Britain. Contributions to the book use a diversity of approaches: from the lucid, forward-looking assessment by Trevor Phillips, which opens the volume; through Patrick Vernon’s account of the legacy of Powell’s speech in Birmingham and how it inspired him to launch a national campaign for Windrush Day; to the plea from novelist and playwright Chris Hannan for a fully inclusive, national conversation to help overturn deeply ingrained prejudice in all parts of our society.

part I|84 pages

Windrush and Powell

chapter 1|11 pages

2048

Europe one hundred years on from Windrush

chapter 2|16 pages

The children of the Windrush generation

An oral history study

chapter 4|8 pages

Many rivers to cross

The legacy of Enoch Powell in Wolverhampton

chapter 6|12 pages

Citizen backlash correspondence

Letters to Enoch Powell after “Rivers of Blood”

part II|110 pages

Caribbean legacies

chapter 7|16 pages

Producing a (cultural) identity

Nation and immigration in Stuart Hall’s writing

chapter 8|16 pages

“There soon may not be any West Indian left who made the passage to England”

Caryl Phillips and the Windrush years

chapter 9|16 pages

Letters and chronicles from the Windrush generation

Epistolary sorrow, epistolary joy

chapter 10|15 pages

“Don’t Call Us Immigrants”

The musical and political legacy of reggae in Britain

chapter 12|18 pages

The Windrush generation in the picture

Armet Francis, Neil Kenlock, Dennis Morris and Charlie Phillips

chapter 13|6 pages

Chris Hannan’s What Shadows

What drama? A conversation with the nation

part III|30 pages

Post-war British immigration policy in context

chapter 15|13 pages

Framing and legitimising discriminatory immigration policies

A cross-channel survey (1948–1970)

chapter 16|15 pages

The Empire Windrush migration in international context

Debates about race and colour of skin in British Canada, 1900s–1960s