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Further Reading

The following books are recommended as further reading for those interested in the topics discussed in this online exhibition. Do get in touch if you have any more suggestions, so we can add them to the list!

Akala. (2019). Natives : Race and Class in the Ruins of Empire. London: Two Roads.

Bronski, M. (2011). A Queer History of the United States. Boston: Beacon Press.

Cook, M., Cocks, H., Mills, R., & Trumbach, R. (2007). A Gay History of Britain : Love and Sex between Men since the Middle Ages. Oxford : Greenwood World.

Eddo-Lodge, R. (2018). Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People about Race. London: Bloomsbury.

Kwoba, B., Chantiluke, R., & Nkopo, A. (2018). Rhodes Must Fall : The Struggle to Decolonise the Racist Heart of Empire. London : Zed.

Lewis, B. (2013). British Queer History : New Approaches and Perspectives. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

Lindfors, B. (1994). Comparative Approaches to African Literatures. Amsterdam: Rodopi.

Locke, A. (1997). The New Negro. New York: Touchstone.

Locke, A., & Harris, L. (1989). The Philosophy of Alain Locke : Harlem Renaissance and beyond. Philadelphia : Temple University Press.

Mendelssohn, M. (2018). Making Oscar Wilde. Oxford : Oxford University Press.

Ngqulunga, B. (2017). The man who founded the ANC : A biography of Pixley Ka Isaka Seme. Cape Town: Penguin Books.

Olusoga, D. (2016). Black and British : A Forgotten History. London: Macmillan.

Powell, K., & Raby, P. (2013). Oscar Wilde in Context. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Roberts, P. (2013). Black Oxford : The Untold Stories of Oxford University’s Black Scholars. Oxford: Signal Books.

Schaeper, Thomas J, & Schaeper, Kathleen. (2010). Rhodes Scholars, Oxford, and the Creation of an American Elite. New York: Berghahn Books.