Autor: |
Evans, Diana Omo, Knight, David, O'Kane, Paul, Wood, Andy, De Souza, Pauline, Chohan, Satinder, Ching-Liang Low, Gail, Enisuoh, Raymond, Sillis, Jane, Procter, James, Ponzanesi, Sandra, Salih, Sara, Barnwell, Andrea D., Jones, Doreth, Sunmonu, Yinka, Zahir, Samina, Donnell, Alison |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture; 2001, p87-101, 15p |
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. David Dabydeen moved to Great Britain from Guyana in 1969. He researched the works of eighteenth-century visual artist Hogarth for his Ph.D. degree at London University. After a Research Fellowship at Oxford University, he took a job as lecturer at the Centre for Caribbean Studies at the University of Warwick, where he is now a professor and director of the center. Ferdinand Dennis is known for his journalistic contributions to radio and television that explore ethnicity and identity. His BBC Radio 4 programs include Journey Round My People. The notion of the diasporic intellectual encompasses a migrant figure who is unencumbered by territorial affiliation and is part of a post-national community. Even though the term has acquired a figurative flexibility and refers to migrant intelligentsia who move around the globe for better education and professional status, its debt to histories of pain and alienation should not be forgotten. The original notion of diaspora refers to a collective trauma of the banishment and exile of Jewish communities. |
Databáze: |
Supplemental Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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