'This excellent collection of essays engages fully and seriously with the wealth, complexity, and variety of British writing created by authors of African, Asian and Caribbean descent. It is essential reading for anyone who wants to acknowledge and understand the diversity of British literature and culture and its development over the past 250 years.'
Lyn Innes - Emeritus Professor of Postcolonial Literatures, University of Kent
'This groundbreaking book of essays is a must-have for all editors, critics and literary editors who need to know this literary history, and all university and other libraries, and writers and readers.'
Bernardine Evaristo - Brunel University, London
‘This outstanding feat of collective scholarship offers not only a wealth of information and an easily accessible reference base, but also a state-of-the art survey with a wide array of incisive interventions in scholarly debates that are likely to have a long-lasting impact on the study of Black and Asian British Writing.’
Frank Schulze-Engler
Source: Anglistik
‘This outstanding feat of collective scholarship offers not only a wealth of information and an easily accessible reference base, but also a state-of-the art survey with a wide array of incisive interventions in scholarly debates that are likely to have a long-lasting impact on the study of Black and Asian British Writing. This History is clearly a must-have: for any library with holdings on British, Anglophone and Postcolonial literature and for any scholar researching or teaching in these fields.’
Frank Schulze-Engler
Source: Anglistik
‘The Cambridge History of Black and Asian British Writing is a welcome compilation … The essays in the volume are generally well written and balanced.’
Vaibhav Iype Parel
Source: ariel: A Review of International English Literature
‘This new Cambridge History of Black and Asian British Writing will be greatly useful to students and teachers in a variety of fields beyond postcolonial and decolonial studies: intellectual history, literary theory, performance studies, Black Studies, area studies, print culture studies, media studies, diaspora studies. The numerous contributions to this landmark volume … [invite] readers to re-consider the asymmetries at the heart of the colonial power relation, but also to consider the blurred lines between what could be seen as strictly European and what is clearly transnational, transcultural and diasporic.’
Source: Commonwealth Essays and Studies