This is the story, in his own words, of the extraordinary life of Stuart
Hall: writer, thinker and one of the leading intellectual lights of his
age. Growing up in a middle-class family in 1930s Jamaica, then still a
British colony, Hall found himself caught between two worlds: the
stiflingly respectable middle class in Kingston, who, in their habits
and ambitions, measured themselves against the white planter elite; and
working-class and peasant Jamaica, neglected and grindingly poor, though
rich in culture, music and history.
But as colonial rule was
challenged, things began to change in Jamaica and across the world.
When, in 1951, a scholarship took him across the Atlantic to Oxford
University, Hall encountered other Caribbean writers and thinkers, from
Sam Selvon and George Lamming to V. S.
Naipaul. He also forged friendships with the likes of Raymond Williams and E. P. Thompson, with whom he worked in the formidable political movement, the
New Left, and developed his groundbreaking ideas on cultural theory.
Familiar Stranger takes us to the heart of Hall's struggle in post-war
England: that of building a home and a life in a country where, rapidly,
radically, the social landscape was transforming, and urgent new
questions of race, class and identity were coming to light. Told with
passion and wisdom, this is a story of how the forces of history shape
who we are.
Familiar Stranger : A Life between Two Islands - Stuart Hall
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£9.99