Biracial Britain, Remi Adekoya
Biracial Britain, Remi Adekoya
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Biracial Britain
What It Means To Be Mixed Race

Author: Remi Adekoya

Narrator: Remi Adekoya

Unabridged: 10 hr 52 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/28/2021


Synopsis

*The Times 100 best books to read for summer 2021*

'Barack Obama had a special talent for making different kinds of people feel comfortable around him because of his biracial life experience, says Adekoya. By the same token, Adekoya himself seems poised to become one of the most important and subtle new voices in Britain's never-ending conversation about race' David Goodhart, Unherd

Mixed-race is the fastest-growing minority group in Britain. By the end of the century roughly one in three of the population will be mixed-race, with this figure rising to 75 per cent by 2150. Mixed-race is, quite literally, the future.

Paradoxically, however, this unprecedented interracial mixing is happening in a world that is becoming more and more racially polarized. Race continues to be discussed in a binary fashion: black or white, we and they, us and them. Mixed-race is not treated as a unique identity, but rather as an offshoot of other more familiar identities - remnants of the twentieth century 'one-drop' rule ('if you're not white, you're black') alarmingly prevail. Therefore, where does a mixed-race person fit? Stuck in the middle of these conflicts are individuals trying to survive and thrive. It is high time we developed a new understanding of mixed-race identity better suited to our century.

Remi Adekoya (the son of a Nigerian father and a Polish mother, now living in Britain) has come to the conclusion that while academic theories can tell us a lot about how identities are socially constructed, they are woeful at explaining how identities are felt. He has spoken to mixed-race Britons of all ages and racial configurations to present a thoughtful and nuanced picture of what it truly means to be mixed-race in Britain today.

A valuable new addition to discussions on race, Biracial Britain is a search for identity, a story about life that makes sense to us. An identity is a story. These are our stories.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Bradley on November 02, 2022

A fabtastic read, insightful and a fresh look at race relations from a group that is usually left out of what can be so often a binary narrative. Highly recommend and the great thing about this is that each chapter gives you a new person's perspective with some commentary by Remi along the way which......more

Goodreads review by Rik on November 24, 2023

Absolutely well written, I was surprised to see it was essentially a collection of anecdotes and stories as opposed to academic literature and theories, I enjoyed reading the different experiences of various mixed race individuals and was surprised to find myself relating to not only black and white......more

Goodreads review by c prose on March 08, 2024

Obsessed with this book. I feel like usually when mixed race people speak of their identity struggles, it annoys me (btw I’m a mixed person myself). It usually takes away from the bigger conversation of how racism of darker skinned individuals is way worse and deserves way more space! However what bi......more

Goodreads review by Mel on January 31, 2025

Excellent book giving a unique insight into the experiences of biracial people living in the UK. This stands out from similar books because books about race tend to focus on the perspective of people who are entirely one ethnicity. It's unusual to read about life as a child of two different ethnicit......more

Goodreads review by Sanaa on March 21, 2023

This book was a very interesting read, and the first book I’ve read which encompasses several different perspectives from mixed race individuals. I was surprised to find that although I am not mixed race, I related to many experiences that mixed race people went through. However, I do feel as though......more


Quotes

Wealth of thought-provoking experiences . . . firmly putting biracial Britain on the map Sunday Times

Absorbing . . . refreshingly open-minded . . . [Adekoya is] an exceptionally good listener with an ear for nuance and complexity. If there are tales of emotional suffering, the book strikes a positive note too . . . this book is helping to broaden the conversation The Times

. . . turning assumptions upside down. Largely composed of a mixed-race person sharing, in uninterrupted text, their experiences of growing up in Britain . . . followed by a shorter commentary by Adekoya - offering a more conceptual angle to these personal experiences . . . The effect of this structure is revelatory: many of the assumptions about what it means to be mixed-race are shown to bear only a superficial resemblance to reality Evening Standard

An important treatise . . . there is wisdom to be garnered from the accounts contained within Biracial Britain Buzz magazine

A bracing polemic i news

The publishing world had already begun to reflect a growing appetite for writing on race and racism, and in 2021 the theme is developed and deepened New Statesman

A valuable new addition to discussions on race Black Business Guide

A ground-breaking book . . . Interspersed with Adekoya's engaging reflections of his own upbringing, crucially, Adekoya seeks to argue that being mixed race is a unique identity in and of itself Cosmopolitan

Barack Obama had a special talent for making different kinds of people feel comfortable around him because of his biracial life experience, says Adekoya. By the same token, Adekoya himself seems poised to become one of the most important and subtle new voices in Britain's never-ending conversation about race Unherd