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The Night Malcolm X Spoke at the Oxford Union
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Table of Contents

Photo section follows page 106 Foreword, by Henry Louis Gates Jr. Acknowledgments Prologue: A Black Revolutionary Meets Historic Oxford 1. A Life of Travel and Discovery: Malcolm X, 1925--1964 2. Oxford, Britain, and Race, 1870--1964 3. Antiracism Protests in Oxford, 1956--1964 4. The Debate, December 3, 1964 5. After the Debate, 1964--1968 Epilogue Notes Index

About the Author

Stephen Tuck is Professor of Modern History at the University of Oxford and Director of the Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities. He is the author of several books including We Ain't What We Ought to Be: The Black Freedom Struggle from Emancipation to Obama and coauthor of Historians across Borders: Writing American History in a Global Age (UC Press).

Reviews

"The Night Malcolm X Spoke at the Oxford Union is both a lucid portrait of Malcolm X at the height of his powers and a piercing exploration of the history of race in Britain - one that speaks every bit as much to our present-day circumstances as to the radicalism of 50 years ago." -- Christopher Phelps Financial Times "Tuck has resurrected the story of the British civil rights struggle, as resolute and stirring as the struggle in the US. Read it, be moved and enraged, and ask why antiracism gave up and went to bed." -- YASMIN ALIBHAI-BROWN The Independent "If there is a legacy to be carried from this book, for me it is in the salient need to internationalise our struggles and our histories. Often dominated by American discourses and figures of anti-racist protest, many of the transatlantic connections evident in resistance movements noted in this book have been obfuscated in service of more sanitised historical narratives... The 50th anniversary can be an opportunity to sit back and admire the oratory of Malcolm X, or it can be an opportunity to remind ourselves and re-enforce a cross-border, transnational, transhistorical struggle - just as the Oxford students in the 1960s did." -- Mahmoud Ally Oxford Today "Tuck's history reads like magazine journalism-packing both a kaleidoscopic, global view of race in the '60s and a tight, propulsive story of Malcolm X's December 1964 trip to England shortly before his death." THE BEST BOOKS ABOUT THE VOLATILE 1960s -- Scott Porch Daily Beast "Tuck's narrative history recounts the "story" ... of Malcolm's visit to Oxford, which he does through five well-crafted chapters." -- Douglas Field TLS "Tuck is to be thanked for bringing this important historical moment back to light and, in situating it in its wider context, contributing significantly to our understanding of the transatlantic civil rights movement and Oxford's particular place within it... the book is a pleasure to read and should prove enjoyable for historians and non-historians alike: it comes highly recommended for no more complicated reason than this." -- Mike Joseph The Voice

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