Kapitel
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Bibliography
-
Barbara Korte
und Eva Ulrike Pirker
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter 1
- Editorial 2
- Contents 5
- Acknowledgments 7
- Note on Citations 9
- Introduction 11
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PART I: Between Public and Popular: Approaching a Black British History
- 1. Discovering a Past for the Present 17
- 2. Historical Culture and Social Communication 37
- 3. Popular Re/Presentation of History and Its Media 47
- 4. Key Aims and Questions 53
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PART II: The Bicentenary Effect: How the Slave Trade, Slavery and Abolition Went Public
- 1. Remembering and Forgetting Slavery 57
- 2. Screening Slavery and the Slave Trade before the Bicentenary 65
- 3. Simon Schama’s Rough Crossings: From Popular History Book to Television History 81
- 4. The Abolition as Costume Film: Amazing Grace – Black History with a White Hero 99
- 5. Setting a Critical Tone: In Search of William Wilberforce 115
- 6. ›Doing an Anniversary‹: The Event Culture Surrounding 2007 121
- 7. The Impact of 2007 – Slavery and the Slave Trade in British Museums 135
- 8. Family Matters: Genealogy as Popular (Black) History 163
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PART III: Keeping Post-War Migration Visible: The Windrush Story in the Twenty-First Century
- 1. Screening and Staging an Arrival 183
- 2. Family, Sport and Period in Wondrous Oblivion 185
- 3. Notting Hill in a Historical Crime Serial 199
- 4. Migration as Heritage Drama? Small Island 207
- 5. Migration History as Entertainment? Trends in Contemporary British Theatre 231
- 6. The Windrush Story as Musical 239
- Conclusion 251
- Bibliography 255
- Index 279
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter 1
- Editorial 2
- Contents 5
- Acknowledgments 7
- Note on Citations 9
- Introduction 11
-
PART I: Between Public and Popular: Approaching a Black British History
- 1. Discovering a Past for the Present 17
- 2. Historical Culture and Social Communication 37
- 3. Popular Re/Presentation of History and Its Media 47
- 4. Key Aims and Questions 53
-
PART II: The Bicentenary Effect: How the Slave Trade, Slavery and Abolition Went Public
- 1. Remembering and Forgetting Slavery 57
- 2. Screening Slavery and the Slave Trade before the Bicentenary 65
- 3. Simon Schama’s Rough Crossings: From Popular History Book to Television History 81
- 4. The Abolition as Costume Film: Amazing Grace – Black History with a White Hero 99
- 5. Setting a Critical Tone: In Search of William Wilberforce 115
- 6. ›Doing an Anniversary‹: The Event Culture Surrounding 2007 121
- 7. The Impact of 2007 – Slavery and the Slave Trade in British Museums 135
- 8. Family Matters: Genealogy as Popular (Black) History 163
-
PART III: Keeping Post-War Migration Visible: The Windrush Story in the Twenty-First Century
- 1. Screening and Staging an Arrival 183
- 2. Family, Sport and Period in Wondrous Oblivion 185
- 3. Notting Hill in a Historical Crime Serial 199
- 4. Migration as Heritage Drama? Small Island 207
- 5. Migration History as Entertainment? Trends in Contemporary British Theatre 231
- 6. The Windrush Story as Musical 239
- Conclusion 251
- Bibliography 255
- Index 279