Researching Black British history “often feels like a rescue effort, a race against time,” writes Jason Okundaye. In his first book, he narrates the mingled histories of seven astonishing lives in the Black gay community of South London during the 1980s. The narrative he pieces together from oral history, archival research and even gossip (a vital historical record in its own right, he argues) is a fresh depiction of Black gay life on its own terms: from politics and activism to Aids, music, fashion, sex, love and grief.
He talks to Moya Lothian-McLean about undoing stereotypes of Black Britishness, working with a disappearing archive, and the creative art of non-fiction. Revolutionary Acts: Love and Brotherhood in Black Gay Britain is the first book from Okundaye, whose essays on politics and culture have appeared in the Guardian, GQ and the London Review of Books.
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ACFM Trip 38: Movement and Stillness
Novara FM: In Search of Red Africa w/ Kevin Okoth
Downstream: How Protest Movements Fall Apart w/ Vincent Bevins
Novara FM: Emergency Brake! On The Road With Just Stop Oil
Downstream: Philosophy’s Biggest Pessimist w/ John Gray
Novara FM: Truth That Only Fiction Reveals w/ Pankaj Mishra
Downstream: The Left Is Traumatised w/ Gary Younge
Novara FM: Crossing the Class Divide w/ Lynsey Hanley
Downstream: Europe Is Over w/ Yanis Varoufakis
ACFM Trip 37: Surrealism
Novara FM: Trillions of Tiny Flying Particles w/ Jay Owens
Downstream: Into The Mirror World w/ Naomi Klein
Novara FM: The Other Enlightenment w/ Kenan Malik
Downstream: Big Pharma’s Secrets w/ Nick Dearden
Novara FM: Is It Time For Post-Doom Politics? w/ Jem Bendell
Downstream: Empire, Austerity and Why Corbyn Was Right About Iraq w/ Rory Stewart
Novara FM: What Does Class Mean Now?
Downstream: Here’s How Power Really Works w/ Grace Blakeley
Downstream: Oligarchs Are Ruining This Country w/ Sam Bright
ACFM Trip 36: Festivals
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