
Dr Michelle Asantewa and James Prescott Kier will be in conversation with Professor Deidre Osborne.
Professor Osborne is editor ofThe Cambridge Companion to British Black and Asian Literature, the first comprehensive account of the influence of contemporary British Black and Asian writing in British culture, which covers 65 years of writing.
In 2014 Professor Osborne co-founded the MA in Black British Writing/Literature at Goldsmiths University, a ground-breaking course taught nowhere else. It received the Student Union Teaching Award for "Compelling and Diverse Curriculum" in (2018)
In 2017, Osborne wrote the syllabus and produced materials[to facilitate the Edexcel Examination Board's A-level Black British Literature syllabus.
Professor Osborne was responsible for organising two notable international conferences at Goldsmiths University : "On Whose Terms?": Critical Negotiations in Black British Literature and the Arts, in 2008, and On Whose Terms? Ten Years On… (2018). She co-convened the spoken-word poetry conference at Royal Central School of speech and Drama in 2022 and supported the International Black Speculative Writing Festival, directed by Kadia Sesay, at Goldsmiths in 2024.
Professor Osborne is now Distinguished Professor in Literatures and Drama in English at Central China Normal University where she teaches Black British writing to Chinese students.Significantly she now teaches the unique course that she co-created at Goldsmiths, in China, where students have opportunities to study Black British literature on a scale not possible in Britain.
and James Prescott Keir author of "Teacher Black: My Year In China"
They will cover:
This event is organised by Black History Walks as part of 60 Years Since 1965 the first ever Race Relations Act, and 20 years of the African Odysseys film seriess
Other coming events www.blackhistorywalks.co.uk HERE
About African Odysseys
The volunteer-run, African Odysseys film programme screens educational, popular, anti-racist, films with Q&A's . It regularly filled the BFI Southbank 450 seater at 2pm on Saturdays when cinemas are typically 'dead'.The British Film Institute refused to answer 8 simple questions or meet the volunteers, then cancelled the programme so they could 'cut costs and promote diversity' HERE
African Odysseys continues to show films across London as can be seen HERE