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Cool Britannia and Multi-Ethnic Britain - Uncorking the Champagne Supernova (Paperback)
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Cool Britannia and Multi-Ethnic Britain - Uncorking the Champagne Supernova (Paperback)
Series: Routledge Research in Race and Ethnicity
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Cool Britannia and Multi-Ethnic Britain: Uncorking the Champagne
Supernova attempts to move away from the melancholia of Cool
Britannia and the discourse which often encases the period by
repositioning this phenomenon through an ethnic minority
perspective. In March 1997, the front page of the magazine Vanity
Fair announced 'London Swings! Again!' This headline was a direct
reference to the swinging London of the 1960s - the English capital
which became the era-defining epicentre of the world for its
burgeoning rock and pop music scene, with its daring new youth
culture, and the boutique fashion houses of Carnaby Street captured
most indelibly by the Mods, Rockers, and psychedelic hippies of the
time. In the 1990s this renewed interest in the swinging 60s seemed
to reinvigorate popular culture, after a global period in the 1980s
which would see the collapse of traditional communism and the
ending of Cold War, while ushering in the beginnings of a new
technological age spearheaded by Apple, Microsoft, and IBM. The
dawn of the 1990s meant that peace and love would once again reign
supreme, with Britannia being at the forefront of 'cool' again.
Godfathers of the Mancunian Rock scene New Order would declare
'Love had the world in motion' and, for a fleeting period, Britain
was about to encounter its second coming as the cultural epicentre
of the world. Although history proffers a period of utopia,
inclusion, and cultural integration, the narrative alters
considerably when exploring this euphoric period through a
discriminatory and racialised lens. This book repositions the
ethnic minority-lived experience during the 1990s from the societal
and political margins to the centre. The lexicon explored here
attempts to provide an altogether different discourse that allows
us to reflect on seminal and racially discriminatory episodes
during the 1990s that subsequently illuminated the systemic racism
sustained by the state. The Cool Britannia years become a
metaphoric reference point for presenting a Britain that was
culturally splintered in many ways. This book utilises storytelling
and auto-ethnography as an instrument to unpack the historical
amnesia that ensues when unpacking the racialised plights of the
time.
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