Autor: |
Enisuoh, Raymond, Zahir, Samina, Williams, Patrick, Sunmonu, Yinka, Wood, Andy, Byrne, Eleanor, Chohan, Satinder, Bhuchar, Suman, Salih, Sara, Courtman, Sandra, Procter, James, Ratnam, Niru, Stein, Mark, De Souza, Pauline, Prince, Tracy J., Mühleisen, Susanne, Walker, Sam, Scafe, Suzanne, Goddard, Lynette, O'Kane, Paul |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture; 2001, p23-61, 39p |
Abstrakt: |
This section presents a reference source on artists, scholars, associations, events and archives that had influenced black British cultural production from 1970 to 2001. Baadass TV is a youth-oriented fashion and culture series aired in 1994. Although the series came under criticism for reinforcing black stereotypes it was also acknowledged as the first British series to explore the wilder side of black culture. Babylon Zoo is the artist Jas Mann. The name comes from the Babylonian colors of his childhood in India contrasted with the bleak urban zoo of his adolescence in Wolverhampton, England. Zenab Badawi was one of the first black women newscasters on television. She built her reputation in terms of viewer recognition on the Channel 4 News, which she joined as a reporter and presenter of the news belt section of the program. While bhangra's origins lie in the Punjab region of India, its importance and influence in Britain lies in its role as a catalyst in the development of a sense of cultural identity and visibility for Asian British youth since around the mid-1980s. Black and White Power Plays was the title given to a series of theater productions arranged through the Institute of Contemporary Arts in 1970 in line with their objective to strengthen the profile of black arts in Britain. |
Databáze: |
Supplemental Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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