《读者、作家和暴乱:种族、印刷文化和八十年代初利物浦的公众》

IF 0.7 1区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Journal of British Studies Pub Date : 2023-11-17 DOI:10.1017/jbr.2023.105
Jack Webb
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文分析了英国北部城市利物浦的黑人和多民族社区L8的印刷文化。通过对印刷材料的批判,包括时事通讯、杂志和小册子,这些都是在当地编写、制作和阅读的,作者评估了一个既想象又生活的社区的建设。这种印刷基础设施促进了L8作为一个城市和国家的身份和归属的集体意识,否则往往会对居民的经济和政治利益怀有种族化的敌意。作者断言,这种对当地的承诺成为1981年托克斯泰斯抗议活动中居民组织集体行动的关键因素。在那次事件前后,该社区的印刷文化为居民提供了采取暴力行动反对政府的理由。同样,这些原始材料强调了邻国之间在考虑这样一个社区的定义和限制及其与国家的关系时的分歧和分歧。因此,作者提供了一种新的方式来思考英国黑人抗议与英国各地社区的具体政治和社会动态的密切关系。
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Readers, Writers, and Riots: Race, Print Culture, and the Public in Liverpool 8 in the Early 1980s
This article analyzes the print culture of the Black and multiethnic community known as L8 in the northern British city of Liverpool. Through a critique of printed materials, including newsletters, magazines, and pamphlets all written, produced and read within the locale, the author assesses the construction of a community that was at once imagined and lived. This print infrastructure facilitated a collective sense of L8 as a marker of identity and belonging in a city and a nation that otherwise often harbored racialized hostility to the residents’ economic and political interests. Such a commitment to the locale, the author asserts, became a key factor in organizing the collective action taken by the residents in the 1981 Toxteth protests. Before and after that event, the neighborhood's print culture served to justify to residents the reasons for taking violent action against the state. Equally, this source material highlights the fissures and divergences between neighbors in their deliberations over the definitions—and limitations—of such a community and its relation to the nation. The author thus offers new ways to think about Black British protest in close relation to the specific political and social dynamics of neighborhoods across Britain.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
10.00%
发文量
163
期刊介绍: The official publication of the North American Conference on British Studies (NACBS), the Journal of British Studies, has positioned itself as the critical resource for scholars of British culture from the Middle Ages through the present. Drawing on both established and emerging approaches, JBS presents scholarly articles and books reviews from renowned international authors who share their ideas on British society, politics, law, economics, and the arts. In 2005 (Vol. 44), the journal merged with the NACBS publication Albion, creating one journal for NACBS membership. The NACBS also sponsors an annual conference , as well as several academic prizes, graduate fellowships, and undergraduate essay contests .
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