Reviews tagging 'Violence'

Brit(ish): On Race, Identity and Belonging by Afua Hirsch

5 reviews

gansey_02's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative medium-paced

4.75


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aislingmoconnell's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional funny hopeful informative reflective medium-paced

5.0


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readingthroughinfinity's review against another edition

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emotional informative reflective medium-paced

4.5

This is an incredibly insightful and informative look into empire, racism, xenophobia, and the treatment of people of colour in UK. Afua Hirsch chronicles her experiences at Oxford University as one of very few women of colour, and the way those experiences shaped her desire to leave the UK and move to Senegal. Living in the UK and attending Oxford, she found her identity as a British person undermined by white people, but when she moved to Senegal, searching for belonging and a more concrete sense of identity, she felt that she didn't fit in there either. 

Hirsch looks back at the UK's colonial history and uses this to inform her analysis of present day attitudes towards people of colour and the persisting idea that white people 'don't see race'. This book is astute, expansive, and very well written and should be a must-read for all white people living in the UK.

Content warnings for discussions of racism, xenophobia, and misogyny, attempted rape, violence, break ins, potential attempted kidnapping. 

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mollyv's review

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challenging informative reflective slow-paced

4.25

Extremely informative deep-dive that was well written.

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sophiemeink's review against another edition

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emotional informative reflective medium-paced

5.0

 "Britain has no ‘white history’. British history is the multiracial, interracial story of a nation interdependent on trade, cultural influence and immigration from Africa, India, Central and East Asia, and other regions and continents populated by people who are not white, and before that, invasion by successive waves of European tribes most of whom, had the concept of whiteness existed at the time, would not have fitted into it either.”

Obviously as the title indicates this is a focus on Britain as it talks through what it can mean to be British and the struggles faced as a Black member of society. 

This was a really good read, I think Hirsch touched on so many different things that are really relevant to Britain’s society such as the ‘I don’t see colour’ standpoint which is strongly evident and why it is bad thing, the British empire and how it is viewed by society in the damaging way it is, the ignorance of British past and constant denial of certain things to modern day situations like Brexit, media, appearances and sex, immigrants and even to the way Muslims are treated. 

I think it was important to talk about the past as Britain really does paint a different picture of the past and that has been very evident in my upbringing from the things I’ve believed to things I never knew (I would definitely like to read more about so I have a true picture instead of the one I’ve been given) and it talked about the present just as much making it feel like a modern book. I also appreciated the way the two was linked as makes you think more deeply in a way. 

Another thing this book did well was it stuck to facts and information when necessary, but it also had a lot of personal experiences drawn from Hirsch’s childhood to adulthood. It was a personal touch that could allow you to see the real-life repercussions of this behaviour and the different ways it can affect people. Hirsch also spoke about friends and family’s situations so you could see how difference in lives have affected certain aspects yet still see similarities. 

I thought this was a well written, comprehensive look into Britain from past, present and identity. It examined a lot of problems in a lot of depth but still easily accessible. It is a book I think everyone in Britain would truly benefit from reading (and else where but it is tailored to Britain of course). I felt like it tackled so much, so well. It was thoughtful-provoking, educational read which still had a personal touch from all of Hirsch's array of experience. 


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