Ending British rule in Africa Ethnic studies / EthnicityOn the eve of World War II, a small, impoverished group of Africans and West Indians in London dared to imagine the unimaginable: the end of British rule in Africa. In books, pamphlets, and periodicals, they launched an anti colonial campaign that used publishing as a pathway to liberation. These writers included West Indians George Padmore, C. L. R. James, and Ras Makonnen, Kenyas Jomo Kenyatta and Sierra Leones I. T. A. Wallace Johnson. Polsgrove
This book combines new approaches to Bergman’s films and writings with more traditional analyses of widely acclaimed masterpieces like Smiles of a Summer Night and Fanny and Alexander
but also published Elizabeth Gaskell: The early years in 1997
the best-known union leader of his generation
An account of British conservativism which avoids the usual confusion between the ideology and the stated principles of a party which prides itself on an ability to change its views according to circumstances
Wallace Johnson –made their point: that colonial rule was oppressive and inconsistent with the democratic ideals Britain claimed at home
The question of how the international community should engage in a legitimate way in state-building in war- torn
The third part considers the implications for theatre of events before and after the fall of the Berlin Wall
the fantastic and the society tale
and global factors in their efforts to justify and promote armed struggle against the Russian state
examining the idea of an emerging gothic that is inextricable from the broader global context in which it circulates
This book examines the history of monastic exemption in early medieval France
and the contradictory social and political aspirations to which it has been anchored in public culture