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Ruins of empire akala
Ruins of empire akala













ruins of empire akala

Akala exposes the racism baked into the mainstream media at the time pointing out that the first reaction of the media to Christie’s victories was not to celebrate his historic success on the world stage but instead to focus on his body, sexualising, and dehumanising him. This is especially so in a chapter called “Lindford’s Lunchbox” where he takes a microscope to the media’s reaction to the Olympic success of athlete Lindford Christie in the 90’s. Where Hirsch explored the hypersexualisation of both black men and women Akala looks at the hypersexualisation of black men.

ruins of empire akala ruins of empire akala

This difference in focus can be seen as where Hirsch wrote about the stigma she experienced that comes with natural black hair, Akala wrote about aspects of black masculinity and how they have changed as he has aged. Both books feature writers exploring ways personal identity can be linked to heritage but Natives, as could be expected, comes at the subject from the perspective of a mixed race man racialized as black.

ruins of empire akala

The more autobiographical aspects of the book where Akala examines his own mixed Jamaican, Scottish, and English heritage makes it almost work as a companion piece to Brit(ish) by Afua Hirch (which TREC has previously reviewed). Akala jumps from personal stories from his youth to deep dives into the Haitian revolution, to give but two examples, and threads them together effortlessly. It is a book which defies efforts to put it in a box, and actively resists attempts at categorisation. Similar to how Akala himself is a rapper, author, lecturer, activist, poet, and entrepreneur this book is part autobiography, part history lesson, and part exploration of the ways race and class impact society and people. Natives: Race And Class In The Ruins Of Empire by Akala is a book which doesn’t fit neatly into any single genre.















Ruins of empire akala