IntroductionGet Up, Stand Up—Then Sit Down and Read: Books, and Rights, for Readers of Colour Chapter OneEmpire and Activism: A Pre-Windrush History of Activist British Children’s Authors and Race Chapter TwoBlack, White, Unite and Fight? Children’s Books and Activism across Racial Lines Chapter ThreeTo be Young, British and Black: Writing for a New Generation of British Readers Chapter Four“Good” Britishness: Black Identity, White Racism and Children’s Publishing 1965-1995 Chapter FiveHostile Environments for History and Publishing: Activists Addressing Children of Colour 2012-2021 Bibliography Index
An exploration into, and a historical recovery of, the ways in which activist-authors and radicals translate their ideas and values into books for children of colour in Britain.
Karen Sands-O’Connor is British Academy Global Professor at Newcastle University, UK, where she previously held a Leverhulme Visiting Professorship. Her previous monographs, Soon Come Home to This Island: West Indians in British Children’s Literature (2008) and Children’s Publishing and Black Britain (2017), examine inclusive literature in the British context.
Karen Sands-O’Connor’s British Activist Authors Addressing Children
of Colour brilliantly explores the history of activist writing for
children of colour in Britain, the historical context in which this
writing appeared as well as the impact activist writing had and
continues to have on its readers. The illuminating book provides
deep insights into the agendas and politics of activist writing
about and for children of colour, and most importantly, encourages
readers to rethink dominant white perspectives in children‘s
literature and its publishing industry. This thought-provoking and
engaging study is an important contribution to understand literary
activism for children in Great Britain, recommended for specialists
and non-specialists alike.
*Ada Bieber, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany*
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