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SHORTLISTED FOR THE BRITISH BOOK AWARDS âBeautiful, haunting,
thought-provoking ⌠A book I will return to again and againâ
Bernardine Evaristo A gorgeously produced, hugely original
examination of Black Britishness in the 21st century What is Black
Britain? In 2021, award-winning poet Roger Robinson and acclaimed
photographer Johny Pitts rented a red Mini Cooper and decided to
follow the coast clockwise in search of an answer to this question.
Leaving London, they followed the River Thames east towards
Tilbury, where the Empire Windrush docked in 1948. Too often, that
is where the history told about Black Britain begins and ends â
but Robinson and Pitts continued out of London, following the coast
clockwise through Margate to Landâs End, Bristol to Blackpool,
Glasgow to John OâGroats and Scarborough to Southend on Sea.
Here, the authors found not only Black British culture long
overlooked in official narratives of Britain, but also the history
of Empire and transatlantic slavery to which every Briton is
tethered. Home Is Not a Place is the spectacular result of the
journey they documented: a free-form composition of photography,
poetry and essays that offers a book-length reflection upon Black
Britishness â its complexity, strength and resilience â at the
start of a new decade. âMasterful ⌠A thing of brillianceâ
Caleb Azumah Nelson, author of Open Water
Robinson takes readers on a globe-trotting tour that combines a
historian's insight with vivid personal memories going back to just
after World War II. From experiencing the 1948 ""Austerity
Olympics"" in London as a young spectator to working as a
journalist in the Boston Marathon media center at the moment of the
2013 bombings, Robinson offers a fascinating first-person account
of the tragic and triumphant moments that impacted the world and
shaped the modern sport. He chronicles the beginnings of the
American running boom, the emergence of women's running, the end of
the old amateur rules, and the redefinition of aging for athletes
and amateurs. With an intimate perspective and insightful
reporting, Robinson captures major historical events through the
lens of running. He recounts running in Berlin at the time of
German reunification in 1990, organizing a replacement track meet
in New Zealand after the disastrous 2011 earthquake, and the
triumph of Ethiopian athlete Abebe Bikila in the 1960 Olympics in
Rome. As an avid runner, journalist, and fan, Robinson brings these
global events to life and reveals the intimate and powerful ways in
which running has intersected with recent history.
Every runner's story is part of a great tradition of running
stories. Running Throughout Time tells the best and most important
of them. From Atalanta, the heroic woman runner of ancient
Greece-when goddesses advised on race tactics-to the new legends of
Billy Mills, Joan Benoit Samuelson, and Allison Roe (the modern
Atalanta), this book brings the greatest runners back to life. It's
the perfect runner's bedside storybook. Colorful, dramatic, alive
with human insight and period detail, these stories are also full
of new discoveries. Within these pages, readers will find the true
story of Pheidippides and the Battle of Marathon; they will read
text from the world's first newspaper report of a footrace (1719).
The book uncovers important evidence of the first road races, the
origins of cross-country running, and the earliest marathons,
telling the true story of the origins of the marathon and just why
racers must run exactly 26 miles, 385 yards (42.2 km). Further, it
tells more modern stories, like those of women's marathon activist,
Kathrine Switzer. Roger Robinson is a vivid storyteller and a
lifelong elite runner who knows the sport deeply and passionately,
yet he is also a meticulous scholar who digs and digs until he gets
the story right. He shares his findings here, such as those from
his investigation of the tragedy during the 1928 Olympics when most
of the women running the 800 meters collapsed in distress. Roger
has been everywhere in running: elite runner, masters champion,
stadium announcer, TV commentator, researcher, and journalist. The
stories in this book are selected because each is significant in
the greater story of running and because Roger can bring something
new and exciting to their telling. From variant translations of
ancient poems, dusty stacks of old newspapers, crackly handwritten
notebooks, and carefully studied film footage, Roger has done every
kind of homework to get these unforgettable stories right. All
runners should read this book to really know whose footsteps they
run in and why running is worthy of the effort they give to it.
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Hurvin Anderson (Hardcover)
Catherine Lampert, Roger Robinson
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R1,744
R1,377
Discovery Miles 13 770
Save R367 (21%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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The Birmingham-born, Turner Prize-nominated artist Hurvin Anderson
is best known for his brightly painted, densely detailed landscapes
and interior scenes, which are drawn from his own photographs,
sketches and personal recollections particularly those relating to
his upbringing in the Afro-Caribbean community in the Midlands, as
well as more recent trips to the Caribbean. Anderson s luscious
paintings have hybridity at their heart. A tug-of-war plays out
between abstraction and figuration, nature versus the manmade,
beauty and menace, and his British and Jamaican heritage. Born in
the United Kingdom as a member of the Jamaican diaspora, Anderson
relates to the Caribbean as both insider and outsider, aware of the
mythmaking that the idea of lost or future paradise generates.
Anderson, the youngest of eight children, grew up listening to his
family reminisce about their lives in the Caribbean before they
moved to England in the 1960s, an emotional through-line to his
work, suggesting the longing and loss that keeps certain
geographies alive in us. This book, Anderson s first major
monograph, has been carefully curated by the artists himself and
includes paintings, sketches, source material and ephemera, studio
shots, and a series of black-and-white drawings created exclusively
for this publication. The volume also features an in-depth and
deeply considered essay by art historian Catherine Lampert, a text
by poet and writer Roger Robinson, and an illustrated chronology.
Writing from a place somewhere between Trinidad and Brixton, from a
vantage point that is at once insider and outsider, these poems
from acclaimed poet Roger Robinson lead to a state of alienation
and unbelonging in black British London. Such a changing reality is
all too evident to the periodic returnee, who is conscious of both
his growing difference and the fragility of his memories of the
world he has known. But these are far from bleak and alienated
poems as the very fear of loss generates a drive to re-create the
remembered world in all its richness, humor, and sensuality.
Displaying a faith in a human capacity for regeneration, these
stirring works shape new concepts of home by the very rewarding act
of re-creating memory through stories that are gracefully and
elegantly rendered.
Robinson takes readers on a globe-trotting tour that combines a
historian's insight with vivid personal memories going back to just
after World War II. From experiencing the 1948 ""Austerity
Olympics"" in London as a young spectator to working as a
journalist in the Boston Marathon media center at the moment of the
2013 bombings, Robinson offers a fascinating first-person account
of the tragic and triumphant moments that impacted the world and
shaped the modern sport. He chronicles the beginnings of the
American running boom, the emergence of women's running, the end of
the old amateur rules, and the redefinition of aging for athletes
and amateurs. With an intimate perspective and insightful
reporting, Robinson captures major historical events through the
lens of running. He recounts running in Berlin at the time of
German reunification in 1990, organizing a replacement track meet
in New Zealand after the disastrous 2011 earthquake, and the
triumph of Ethiopian athlete Abebe Bikila in the 1960 Olympics in
Rome. As an avid runner, journalist, and fan, Robinson brings these
global events to life and reveals the intimate and powerful ways in
which running has intersected with recent history.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
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Suckle (Paperback)
Roger Robinson
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R385
Discovery Miles 3 850
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"Suckle," Roger Robinson's much-anticipated follow up to
"Suitcase," proves once and for all that Roger's unique territory
is memory and its capital is Trinidad - somewhere within its
borders are the answers to everything, if you just look hard
enough. His approach, self-deprecating yet erudite, creates
intoxicating poetry flavoured with the attitude and lingo of his
Trinidadian homeland. Delving into the past with much more
confidence than in his debut, "Suckle" is alive with the terror and
beauty of youth, and memorable for the recurring dance crew
Emperors: '...I was its only non breaking member./ I did the
practical things, the support: / Someone had to carry the
linoleum./ Someone had to adjust the equaliser'. Simple things,
profound truths.
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