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Race, Archival Silences, and a Black Footballer Between the Wars

Martin Johnes Orcid Logo

Twentieth Century British History, Volume: 31, Issue: 4, Pages: 530 - 554

Swansea University Author: Martin Johnes Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1093/tcbh/hwaa023

Abstract

The relative absence of colour in archival sources has led the British historiography of race to concentrate too much on the reactions of white Britons and not enough on black experiences. With some notable exceptions, this has created an analytical emphasis on racism and discrimination rather than...

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Published in: Twentieth Century British History
ISSN: 0955-2359 1477-4674
Published: Oxford University Press (OUP) 2020
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa54325
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first_indexed 2020-05-28T13:08:34Z
last_indexed 2021-01-30T04:18:36Z
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spelling 2021-01-29T14:03:05.5856929 v2 54325 2020-05-28 Race, Archival Silences, and a Black Footballer Between the Wars 8aa6d8da22a168889f76c9a5a6e5fa84 0000-0001-9700-5120 Martin Johnes Martin Johnes true false 2020-05-28 AHIS The relative absence of colour in archival sources has led the British historiography of race to concentrate too much on the reactions of white Britons and not enough on black experiences. With some notable exceptions, this has created an analytical emphasis on racism and discrimination rather than the agency of black men and women to resist prejudices and live meaningful lives. This article explores the life of Welsh footballer Eddie Parris in order to investigate the working-class black experience in interwar Britain. It acts as a reminder of the importance of thinking of people of colour in early twentieth-century Britain as individuals rather than just as a racialized category. Nonetheless, notions of racial difference were so pervasive that race was never irrelevant for their lives. The task for the historian is acknowledge and investigate the impact of these ideas without letting them push aside the actual people within them. Journal Article Twentieth Century British History 31 4 530 554 Oxford University Press (OUP) 0955-2359 1477-4674 1 12 2020 2020-12-01 10.1093/tcbh/hwaa023 COLLEGE NANME History COLLEGE CODE AHIS Swansea University 2021-01-29T14:03:05.5856929 2020-05-28T08:54:59.5493145 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - History Martin Johnes 0000-0001-9700-5120 1 54325__17361__1d5a3d3f17e440b98581841cb2a641a5.pdf parris TCBH revised version 22.docx 2020-05-28T09:04:24.2635153 Output 305824 application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Accepted Manuscript true true eng 54325__17505__4c05846520a046d48662f6e8f06bcb18.pdf 54325.pdf 2020-06-17T10:25:25.2756635 Output 232667 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2022-09-02T00:00:00.0000000 true eng
title Race, Archival Silences, and a Black Footballer Between the Wars
spellingShingle Race, Archival Silences, and a Black Footballer Between the Wars
Martin Johnes
title_short Race, Archival Silences, and a Black Footballer Between the Wars
title_full Race, Archival Silences, and a Black Footballer Between the Wars
title_fullStr Race, Archival Silences, and a Black Footballer Between the Wars
title_full_unstemmed Race, Archival Silences, and a Black Footballer Between the Wars
title_sort Race, Archival Silences, and a Black Footballer Between the Wars
author_id_str_mv 8aa6d8da22a168889f76c9a5a6e5fa84
author_id_fullname_str_mv 8aa6d8da22a168889f76c9a5a6e5fa84_***_Martin Johnes
author Martin Johnes
author2 Martin Johnes
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container_title Twentieth Century British History
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publishDate 2020
institution Swansea University
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doi_str_mv 10.1093/tcbh/hwaa023
publisher Oxford University Press (OUP)
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description The relative absence of colour in archival sources has led the British historiography of race to concentrate too much on the reactions of white Britons and not enough on black experiences. With some notable exceptions, this has created an analytical emphasis on racism and discrimination rather than the agency of black men and women to resist prejudices and live meaningful lives. This article explores the life of Welsh footballer Eddie Parris in order to investigate the working-class black experience in interwar Britain. It acts as a reminder of the importance of thinking of people of colour in early twentieth-century Britain as individuals rather than just as a racialized category. Nonetheless, notions of racial difference were so pervasive that race was never irrelevant for their lives. The task for the historian is acknowledge and investigate the impact of these ideas without letting them push aside the actual people within them.
published_date 2020-12-01T04:07:48Z
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