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Telling the stories behind television's approaches to race
relations, multiculturalism and immigration in the 'golden age' of
British television, this book focuses on the 1960s and 1970s and
argues that the makers of television worked tirelessly to shape
multiculturalism and undermine racist extremism.
The study of race has been an important feature in British
universities for over a hundred years. During this time, academic
understanding of what race describes and means has changed and
developed as has the purpose of racial study. Once considered the
preserve of biologists and physical anthropologists, over the
course of the last century the study of race has transferred mostly
into social scientific disciplines such as sociology. This book
explores this passing of authority on racial matters in the context
of international and domestic political issues.
In a period which spans the rise and fall of Nazism, the onset of
the Cold War, the birth of Apartheid and the death of legal US
segregation, "Racial Science and British Society, 1930-62"
considers the relationship between science, politics and ideology,
arguing that racial scholarship in Britain was shaped in every
period by factors outside of science. At the same time it argues
that it is possible to see the influence of expert racial
scholarship in every significant action of government immigration
policy during this period. This major new study of
Twentieth-century Britain calls into question the impact of racial
ideas on British society and probes into the nature of knowledge
production in science.
This book explores the ways in which personal and social identities
in Britain, France, and Germany were shaped by the lasting impact
of the Second World War.It strengthens the case for considering war
trauma from a comparative European perspective. It encourages
greater understanding of the dynamics of memory and identity. It
accommodates both national and supra-national experiences, thus
contributing to a modern European historiography. It provides a
concise yet illuminating snapshot of the reconstruction of European
societies in the aftermath of World War II.The Second World War
brought suffering and trauma to the people of Europe on an
unprecedented scale. This volume addresses World War II as a common
European trauma by focusing on key trans-national developments and
comparing the different wars as experienced by three similar
civilian populations.
Telling the stories behind television's approaches to race
relations, multiculturalism and immigration in the 'golden age' of
British television, this book focuses on the 1960s and 1970s and
argues that the makers of television worked tirelessly to shape
multiculturalism and undermine racist extremism.
From 1930-62 the idea of race was studied across a range of
academic disciplines. This book explores expert thinkings on race
in the period and explains the relationship between scientific
racial research, social policy and attitudes regarding immigration,
ultimately offering new insight into the evolving understanding of
the idea of race.
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