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Paul Gilroy: is the academy taking race seriously at last?

The winner of this year鈥檚 Holberg Prize, worth over 拢500,000, on career setbacks, changing attitudes and decolonising the curriculum

Published on
March 15, 2019
Last updated
March 19, 2019
paulgilroy
Source: Lola Paprocka

鈥淣othing beats being taken seriously,鈥 said Paul Gilroy. 鈥淭his is about as seriously as you can be taken.鈥 聽

He was referring to the announcement that he is this year鈥檚 winner of the prestigious Holberg Prize, established by the Norwegian Parliament in 2003, for work聽that has 鈥渋nfluenced and, in some cases, reshaped several fields and sub-fields, including cultural studies, critical race studies, sociology, history, anthropology and African American studies鈥.

Now professor of American and English literature at King鈥檚 College London, Professor Gilroy first came to fame with the publication of聽There Ain鈥檛 No Black in the Union Jack聽in 1987, a book聽that set out to challenge the notion that race was 鈥渕arginal to the normal processes by which British society has developed鈥 and argued that class analysis had to be 鈥渟ubstantially reworked in the light of its encounter with 鈥榬ace鈥欌. Although the book has now become a classic, the immediate result, he recalled, was that 鈥渋t was made very clear to me that my temporary contract of employment wasn鈥檛 going to be continued鈥. 聽

So how had attitudes to scholarly work on race changed since then?

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Today, Professor Gilroy acknowledged, 鈥渢here is a greater degree of legitimacy awarded to those of us who want to specialise in these areas. I鈥檓 glad of that, but is that process complete? Not really, not from the discussions I have with younger scholars.鈥 One had recently described to him, for example, 鈥渁 meeting looking at candidates where they were told 鈥榬ace was interesting a few years ago, but not any more鈥.鈥 鈥淭he archival and theoretical work in the field is somehow judged to be secondary or journalistic or identity politics,鈥 Professor Gilroy said.

There had also been an exodus of British specialists in such topics. Professor Gilroy himself spent the period from 1999 to 2005 at Yale University because he thought he would be 鈥渢aken more seriously there鈥, but had returned to the UK 鈥 somewhat ironically in light of Brexit 鈥 because he 鈥渨anted to be part of the intellectual life of this country and part of the scholarly culture of a new Europe that I thought was in the making鈥.

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Debates about the decolonisation of the curriculum, in Professor Gilroy鈥檚 view, had been 鈥渉elpful in purging some of the bad habits and default settings which have left so much of the archive of humanistic studies in the hands of people who have a tacit nationalist orientation鈥.

But, he added: 鈥淓ducated people in the UK need to be much more extensively acquainted with the history of the imperial and colonial past of this country. Where that acquaintance is considered to be the ethnic property of black Britons, then we鈥檝e still got a great deal more work to do.鈥 Furthermore, there were still 鈥渟ome very respected and authoritative figures, often expatriate English voices, who argue it鈥檚 banal to make the kind of criticisms [of empire] that I make. The balance of forces is very divided.鈥 聽

On the shortage of black professors and the challenges faced by ethnic minority students in British universities, Professor Gilroy saw no substitute for 鈥渓ooking in a really patient and detailed way at what people are studying, where they are studying and the pressures they are under鈥. He placed little faith in importing models from the US or 鈥渟imply reaching for a diversity and empowerment agenda鈥, whereby 鈥減eople are packed off to learn a new rhetoric to satisfy the award of Kitemarks鈥. He was equally sceptical about attempts to 鈥渕atch a curriculum to the incoming ethnic or racial or cultural character of students鈥.

The Holberg Prize is given to an outstanding researcher in the arts and humanities, the social sciences, law or theology and comes with NKr6 million (拢530,000). So did Professor Gilroy have any plans as to what to do with the money?

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He said he suspected that he would give some of it to organisations whose work reflected a central aspect of his research. One possibility was聽聽since it 鈥渨orks with families of people who have been killed following contact with the police or in custody. Their activity connects up with arguments about the varying value assigned to the different categories of life along racial lines.鈥

But the award also meant something else to Professor Gilroy. Several of the earlier laureates have also made important contributions to the study of race, he said, including Marina Warner, Natalie Zemon Davis and Ian Hacking, although he said that he suspected that none have been a 鈥渄escendant of Atlantic slaves鈥 like him.

matthew.reisz@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

This may be a step along the road to true racial equality, but it's nowhere near yet. 'Ethnicity' should not be a factor at all. Pepetuating stereotypes, or even creating new ones, will only continue to perpetuate bigotry and people noticing other people's (or even their own) race. Until we can operate a world where we are all one race - the human one - we'll still have to put up with this nonsence about it being significant - Gilroy is NOT a 'black professor' he is a professor.

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