Guardian Review

In this article, the Guardian review Colin Grant's sharp and nuanced memoir: I’m Black So You Don’t Have to Be

I’m Black So You Don’t Have to Be

In this article, the Guardian review Colin Grant’s sharp and nuanced memoir: I’m Black So You Don’t Have to Be

“The writer and former BBC producer offers absorbing portraits of his Windrush generation family, and reflects on the legacy of trauma”

At first glance there is something forcibly piteous about the title of Colin Grant’s book, I’m Black So You Don’t Have to Be. It reads as though there is something inherently burdensome about being Black. It isn’t until you read the full quote – “I’m black so you can do all of those white things. I’m black so you don’t have to be” – which comes from his sometime mentor and “ribald philosopher” Uncle Castus, that you understand it is not meant as a display of martyrdom, but rather an insult. It’s a jab at the privileges of the children of the Windrush generation who, hell-bent on being accepted by British society, have left the labour of Blackness to their parents.

Grant, born in 1961 to Caribbean parents, is an author and a former BBC radio producer. This is his seventh book – as well as other memoirs, he has written biographies and oral histories, all of them about Black lives and times. Bageye at the Wheel, his compelling 2012 memoir, was about growing up in 1970s Luton, and this new work offers a broader account of his life in eight absorbing and nuanced chapters; portraits of family members and others, complete with detailed memories, sharp and funny descriptions on British Caribbean ways of living and being, and reflections on the legacy of intergenerational trauma.

On Key

Related Articles

New York Review of Books

Grant appears less as a neutral observer than as a nonviolent combatant in his memoir, I’m Black So You Don’t Have to Be

Got to keep those good vibraniums

Marvel’s follow-up to the successful Black Panther Wakanda Forever suggests that the Wakandan and Talokan custodians of vibranium, similarly to subjugated native peoples whose resources were exhausted by colonialism, have most to fear from rising tides and temperatures.