2018
DOI: 10.3366/brw.2018.0285
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Ambivalent Relationships: London's Youth Culture and the Making of the Multi-Racial Society in the 1960s

Abstract: The emergence and formation of British working-class youth cultures in the 1960s were characterized by an ambivalent relationship between British identity, global culture and the formation of a multicultural society in the post-war decades. While national and local newspapers mostly reported on racial tensions and racially-motivated violence, culminating in the Notting Hill riots of 1958, the relationship between London's white working-class youth and teenagers with migration backgrounds was also shaped by a r… Show more

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“…Felix Fuhg has argued that music and night clubs 'contained the potential to overcome supposed racial boundaries through common tastes and common experience', even if they did not ultimately overcome unequal power relationships or a sense of otherness. 117 This was evident in boxing too. One trainer recalled some of his fighters muttering 'We don't want any of you lot in here' when a black teenager turned up at his club.…”
Section: Victories Likementioning
confidence: 92%
“…Felix Fuhg has argued that music and night clubs 'contained the potential to overcome supposed racial boundaries through common tastes and common experience', even if they did not ultimately overcome unequal power relationships or a sense of otherness. 117 This was evident in boxing too. One trainer recalled some of his fighters muttering 'We don't want any of you lot in here' when a black teenager turned up at his club.…”
Section: Victories Likementioning
confidence: 92%