Invisible Presence: The Whitening of the Black Community in the Historical Imagination of British Archives

  • Caroline Bressey

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to highlight the methods and ironies of researching Black histories in a British context. It is an attempt to expose tensions between the presence of Black people in London, their material presence in the archives available to researchers, and the complexities of British histories that their presence articulates.

 

RÉSUMÉ
Le but de ce texte est de mettre en évidence les méthodes et les ironies de la recherche des histoires noires dans un contexte britannique. Il tente d’exposer les tensions entre la présence des personnes de race noire à Londres, leur présence matérielle dans les archives disponibles pour les chercheurs, et les complexités des histoires britanniques dans lesquelles leur présence est exprimée.

Author Biography

Caroline Bressey
Caroline Bressey is an Economic and Social Research Council Research Fellow at the Department of Geography, University College London, where she researches the Black Presence in Victorian London, and within this the historical geographies of the anti-racist community in Britain.
Published
2006-09-25
How to Cite
Bressey, Caroline. 2006. “Invisible Presence: The Whitening of the Black Community in the Historical Imagination of British Archives”. Archivaria 61 (September), 47-61. https://archivaria.ca/index.php/archivaria/article/view/12534.
Section
Special Section on Archives, Space and Power