"This is an important story from the front line of multicultural experience, exploring the politics of race, identity and gender. Naseem Khan, an unlikely activist, describes her unusual mixed family background and the pioneering role she played from the sixties onwards in the recognition of ethnic and minority arts. It is essential reading for those trying to understand what Britain is today, and how we got here - a portrait of an age of extraordinary change, in which she played a significant part.” Dame Margaret Drabble
"Culture pioneer who brought ethnic minority arts into the mainstream.” The Guardian
ISBN: 978-1-910422-39-7
Bluemoose, 2017. 22cm x 15.2cm, 227 pages, paperback with colour and b&w photographs
£14.00
How do we make social justice the most pleasurable human experience? How can we awaken within ourselves desires that make it impossible to settle for anything less than a fulfilling...
£12.99
The human body is a site of knowledge production. It holds, shares, creates, enacts, transforms, contests, resists and performs ways of thinking and being in-and-against our worlds, histories and futures.Featuring...
£6.00
Talker is an interview zine about performance. This is Issue #9. It features a conversation with the artist Clifford Owens. He is based in Jersey City, New Jersey, and his work...