Interraciality in Early Twentieth Century Britain: Challenging Traditional Conceptualisations through Accounts of ‘Ordinariness’

The popular conception of interraciality in Britain is one that frequently casts mixed racial relationships, people and families as being a modern phenomenon. Yet, as scholars are increasingly discussing, interraciality in Britain has much deeper and diverse roots, with racial mixing and mixedness n...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chamion Caballero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-04-01
Series:Genealogy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/3/2/21
id doaj-97559fa1ff394a05bc903dae5106ca3c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-97559fa1ff394a05bc903dae5106ca3c2020-11-24T22:15:30ZengMDPI AGGenealogy2313-57782019-04-01322110.3390/genealogy3020021genealogy3020021Interraciality in Early Twentieth Century Britain: Challenging Traditional Conceptualisations through Accounts of ‘Ordinariness’Chamion Caballero0Department of Theatre and Performance, Goldsmiths, University of London, London SE14 6NW, UKThe popular conception of interraciality in Britain is one that frequently casts mixed racial relationships, people and families as being a modern phenomenon. Yet, as scholars are increasingly discussing, interraciality in Britain has much deeper and diverse roots, with racial mixing and mixedness now a substantively documented presence at least as far back as the Tudor era. While much of this history has been told through the perspectives of outsiders and frequently in the negative terms of the assumed ‘orthodoxy of the interracial experience’—marginality, conflict, rejection and confusion—first-hand accounts challenging these perceptions allow a contrasting picture to emerge. This article contributes to the foregrounding of this more complex history through focusing on accounts of interracial ‘ordinariness’—both presence and experiences—throughout the early decades of the twentieth century, a time when official concern about racial mixing featured prominently in public debate. In doing so, a more multidimensional picture of interracial family life than has frequently been assumed is depicted, one which challenges mainstream attitudes about conceptualisations of racial mixing both then and now.https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/3/2/21mixed raceinterracialityblack historysocial historyoral historyordinarinesspeople of colour
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chamion Caballero
spellingShingle Chamion Caballero
Interraciality in Early Twentieth Century Britain: Challenging Traditional Conceptualisations through Accounts of ‘Ordinariness’
Genealogy
mixed race
interraciality
black history
social history
oral history
ordinariness
people of colour
author_facet Chamion Caballero
author_sort Chamion Caballero
title Interraciality in Early Twentieth Century Britain: Challenging Traditional Conceptualisations through Accounts of ‘Ordinariness’
title_short Interraciality in Early Twentieth Century Britain: Challenging Traditional Conceptualisations through Accounts of ‘Ordinariness’
title_full Interraciality in Early Twentieth Century Britain: Challenging Traditional Conceptualisations through Accounts of ‘Ordinariness’
title_fullStr Interraciality in Early Twentieth Century Britain: Challenging Traditional Conceptualisations through Accounts of ‘Ordinariness’
title_full_unstemmed Interraciality in Early Twentieth Century Britain: Challenging Traditional Conceptualisations through Accounts of ‘Ordinariness’
title_sort interraciality in early twentieth century britain: challenging traditional conceptualisations through accounts of ‘ordinariness’
publisher MDPI AG
series Genealogy
issn 2313-5778
publishDate 2019-04-01
description The popular conception of interraciality in Britain is one that frequently casts mixed racial relationships, people and families as being a modern phenomenon. Yet, as scholars are increasingly discussing, interraciality in Britain has much deeper and diverse roots, with racial mixing and mixedness now a substantively documented presence at least as far back as the Tudor era. While much of this history has been told through the perspectives of outsiders and frequently in the negative terms of the assumed ‘orthodoxy of the interracial experience’—marginality, conflict, rejection and confusion—first-hand accounts challenging these perceptions allow a contrasting picture to emerge. This article contributes to the foregrounding of this more complex history through focusing on accounts of interracial ‘ordinariness’—both presence and experiences—throughout the early decades of the twentieth century, a time when official concern about racial mixing featured prominently in public debate. In doing so, a more multidimensional picture of interracial family life than has frequently been assumed is depicted, one which challenges mainstream attitudes about conceptualisations of racial mixing both then and now.
topic mixed race
interraciality
black history
social history
oral history
ordinariness
people of colour
url https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/3/2/21
work_keys_str_mv AT chamioncaballero interracialityinearlytwentiethcenturybritainchallengingtraditionalconceptualisationsthroughaccountsofordinariness
_version_ 1725794005480898560