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Britain’s Brown Babies
The Stories of Children Born to Black GIs and White Women in the Second World War
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Narrado por:
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Katherine Margaret
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De:
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Lucy Bland
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This book reveals the little-known history of the mixed-race children born to Black American servicemen and White British women during the Second World War. Of the three million American soldiers stationed in Britain in 1942-45, about 240,000 were African American. Their relationships with British women resulted in the birth of an estimated 2,000 children, which the African American press named "brown babies"; the British called them "half-castes".
The American army was racially segregated, and Black GIs were forbidden to marry their pregnant White girlfriends. Up to half of these mothers, faced with the stigma of illegitimacy and a mixed-race child, gave up their children for adoption. Often, they ended up in children’s homes, sometimes followed by fostering and occasionally adoption, but adoption societies frequently would not take on "colored" children, who were thought "too hard to place".
Based on extensive interviews, Britain’s Brown Babies presents the stories of more than 50 of these children against the backdrop of shifting government policy and attitudes of the time. Lucy Bland brings to light the struggles they faced, including racism in a then very White Britain, and a lack of family or a clear identity. While some of the accounts of early childhood are heartbreaking, there are also many uplifting narratives of kids finding their American fathers and gaining a sense of self and of heritage.
©2019 Lucy Bland (P)2022 Manchester University Press