Stella Dadzie

Last updated

Stella Dadzie
Born1952 (age 7071)
London, United Kingdom
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)Educationalist, activist, writer and historian
Notable work The Heart of the Race: Black Women's Lives in Britain (co-author; 1985)
A Kick in the Belly: Women, Slavery & Resistance (2020)

Stella Dadzie (born in 1952) is a British educationalist, activist, writer and historian. She is best known for her involvement in the UK's Black Women's Movement, being a founding member of the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent (OWAAD) in the 1970s, and co-authoring with Suzanne Scafe and Beverley Bryan in 1985 the book The Heart of the Race: Black Women's Lives in Britain . In 2020, Verso published a new book by Dadzie, A Kick in the Belly: Women, Slavery & Resistance. [1]

Contents

Early life

Dadzie was born in London to a white English mother [1] and Ghanaian father, who was the first trained pilot in Ghana and after joining the RAF he flew as a navigator in missions over Belgium during the Second World War. [1] Dadzie was in foster care in Wales for about 18 months, before being returned to her mother at the age of four. [1] Interviewed in 2020, Dadzie said: "We experienced poverty, homelessness and racism – my mother was ostracised as she had a black child and was a single parent. We moved around London a huge amount, as we were constantly getting thrown out by racist landlords. There was a lot of pain and suffering." [1] Dadzie did not meet her father and siblings again until she was 12. [1]

Activism and work

As a student in the early 1970s, Dadzie spent a year studying in Germany, where she recalls having experienced "very in-your-face racism". [2] [3] On returning to Britain, she worked with the publication African Red Family and British journal The Black Liberator, selling copies outside Brixton tube station. However, she found them too theoretical. [2] In her twenties, she attended protests in London and Greenham Common. [1]

She was working as a teacher when she became a founder member of the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent (OWAAD), [2] [4] active between 1978 and 1982, [5] an umbrella group that challenged white domination of the women's liberation movement of the time. [6] Before co-founding OWAAD, Dadzie was already a part of the Tottenham-based United Black Women's Action Group (UBWAG), where she met Martha Osamor. [7] She had also met Gail Lewis and Gerlin Bean, members of the Brixton Black Women's Group (BBWG). [8] These activists, along with other members of Black women's groups in Britain such as Olive Morris, worked together under OWAAD. [9]

In 1985, The Heart of the Race: Black Women's Lives in Britain was published by Virago Press, having been commissioned by the publisher five years earlier in 1980. [10] The authors, Dadzie, Beverley Bryan and Suzanne Scafe, relied on interviews, weaving together stories to address the experiences of Black women in Britain and the development of the UK's Black Women's Movement. The Heart of the Race won the 1985 Martin Luther King Award for Literature. [11] The book was reissued by Verso (with a new foreword by the Guardian columnist Lola Okolosie) in 2018. [12] In a final chapter added to the new edition, Dadzie states: "In these crucial times we need to remember who we are, remember what we've come from, remember what we've achieved, and never let that be forgotten, because it gives us power, strength and vision. This is what feeds the enthusiasm and the energies of the next generation." [13]

Dadzie has written widely on curriculum development and good practice with black adult learners, and the development of anti-racist strategies with schools, colleges and youth services. [11] Her poetry has been published in Tempa Tupu! Africana Women's Poetic Self-Portrait (Africa World Press, 2008), and in the 2019 anthology New Daughters of Africa (edited by Margaret Busby). [14]

In 2020, Verso published a new book by Dadzie, A Kick in the Belly: Women, Slavery and Resistance, which explores how enslaved women "kicked back" against slavery. [1] She has said that the seeds for the book were planted some decades earlier when she took time off from teaching to study at SOAS, University of London, working on an MA thesis that led her to focus on Jamaica and what life was like for women living on the plantation. [15] As she writes:

"I came to realize that studying history was like detective work. However bloodied or one-sided the evidence, it could be interrogated and interpreted in an infinite number of ways. Then as now, lying by omission was common practice, and nowhere was this more apparent than in regard to black and brown-skinned women. The records, diaries, plantation inventories, abolitionist debates, much of the primary evidence, in fact, had either been written, compiled or interpreted by white males who assumed their experience was not only central but all-embracing. So, despite immersing myself in specialist history texts for months on end, my question continued to rankle: in over 400 years of slavery, with all of its documented horrors, what happened to the women? [16]

The TLS review of A Kick in the Belly commented that Dadzie "puts a narrative of empowerment and hope at the centre of the brutal history of slavery. ... It is a necessary addition to discussions of the legacies of slavery in Britain." [17]

Pluto's 2021 edition of Black People in the British Empire by Peter Fryer carries a foreword by Dadzie, [18] as does the book Hairvolution: Her Hair, Her Story, Our History, by Saskia Calliste and Zainab Raghdo (Supernova Books, 2021). [19]

Dadzie's papers are held at the Black Cultural Archives, where they are among the most visited collections. [2] [20] [21]

Selected works

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henry Highland Garnet</span> American abolitionist (1815–1882)

Henry Highland Garnet was an American abolitionist, minister, educator and orator. Having escaped as a child from slavery in Maryland with his family, he grew up in New York City. He was educated at the African Free School and other institutions, and became an advocate of militant abolitionism. He became a minister and based his drive for abolitionism in religion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Slavery in Canada</span>

Slavery in Canada includes historical practices of enslavement practiced by both the First Nations during the pre-Columbian era, and by colonists during the period of European colonization.

Sheila Rowbotham is an English socialist feminist theorist and historian.

Hazel Vivian Carby is Professor Emerita of African American Studies and of American Studies. She served as Charles C. and Dorathea S. Dilley Professor of African American Studies and American Studies at Yale University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Slavery in colonial Spanish America</span> Economic and social institution central to the operation of the Spanish Empire

Slavery in the Spanish American colonies was an economic and social institution which existed throughout the Spanish Empire including Spain itself. In its American territories, early Spanish monarchs put forth laws against enslaving Indigenous peoples of the Americas. Queen Isabella outlawed the enslavement of Native Americans in the Spanish colonies of the New World because she viewed the natives as subjects of the Spanish monarchy. While Spain displayed an early abolitionist stance towards the Indigenous, some instances of illegal Native American slavery continued to be practiced by rogue individuals, particularly until the New Laws of 1543 which expressly prohibited it.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sarah Parker Remond</span> American anti-slavery activist (1826–1894)

Sarah Parker Remond was an American lecturer, activist and abolitionist campaigner.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Olive Morris</span> Jamaican-born British community leader and activist (1952–1979)

Olive Elaine Morris was a Jamaican-born British-based community leader and activist in the feminist, black nationalist, and squatters' rights campaigns of the 1970s. At the age of 17, she claimed she was assaulted by Metropolitan Police officers following an incident involving a Nigerian diplomat in Brixton, South London. She joined the British Black Panthers, becoming a Marxist–Leninist communist and a radical feminist. She squatted buildings on Railton Road in Brixton; one hosted Sabarr Books and later became the 121 Centre, another was used as offices by the Race Today collective. Morris became a key organiser in the Black Women's Movement in the United Kingdom, co-founding the Brixton Black Women's Group and the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent in London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of slavery in Virginia</span> Aspect of history

Slavery in Virginia began with the capture and enslavement of Native Americans during the early days of the English Colony of Virginia and through the late eighteenth century. They primarily worked in tobacco fields. Africans were first brought to colonial Virginia in 1619, when 20 Africans from present-day Angola arrived in Virginia aboard the ship The White Lion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bread and Roses Award</span> British radical literary award

The Bread and Roses Award for Radical Publishing is a British literary award presented for the best radical book published each year, with radical book defined as one that is "informed by socialist, anarchist, environmental, feminist and anti-racist concerns" – in other words, ideologically left books. The award believes itself to be the UK's only left-wing only book prize. Books must be written, or largely written by authors or editors normally living in the UK, or international books available for purchase in the UK. Winning authors receive £1,000. The Bread and Roses Award is sponsored by the Alliance of Radical Booksellers and has no corporate sponsorship.

Lauretta Ngcobo was a South African novelist and essayist. After being in exile between 1963 and 1994 – in Swaziland, then Zambia and finally England, where she taught for 25 years – she returned to South Africa and lived in Durban. Ngcobo's writings between the 1960s and early 1990s have been described as offering "significant insights into the experiences of Black women of apartheid's vagaries". As a novelist, she is best known for And They Didn't Die (1990), set in 1950s South Africa and portraying "the particular oppression of women who struggle to survive, work the land and maintain a sense of dignity under the apartheid system while their husbands seek work in the mines and cities."

The Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent (OWAAD) was an activist organisation for British Black and Asian women established in 1978, with founder members including Stella Dadzie, Olive Morris, and Gail Lewis. It has been called "a watershed in the history of Black women's rights activism".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor</span> American academic and author

Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor is an American academic, writer, and activist. She is a professor of African American Studies at Northwestern University. She is the author of From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation (2016). For this book, Taylor received the 2016 Cultural Freedom Award for an Especially Notable Book from the Lannan Foundation.

<i>Why Im No Longer Talking to White People About Race</i> 2017 debut book by Reni Eddo-Lodge

Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race is a 2017 debut book by British writer Reni Eddo-Lodge that was published by Bloomsbury Publishing.

Beverley Bryan is a Jamaican educationist and retired academic who was a professor of language education at the University of the West Indies in Mona. Settling in Britain with her parents in the late 1950s, she went on to become a founding member of the Brixton Black Women's Group and co-authored the 1985 book The Heart of the Race: Black Women's Lives in Britain.

Elizabeth Obi is a British activist who was involved in the feminist, black nationalist, and squatters' rights campaigns of the 1970s. A close friend of Olive Morris, in 2009 she founded the Remembering Olive Collective, which researches and documents Morris's life.

The Martin Luther King Memorial Prize was instituted by novelist John Brunner and his wife and was awarded annually to a literary work published in the US or Britain that was deemed to improve interracial understanding, "reflecting the ideals to which Dr. Martin Luther King dedicated his life". As of 1984, the author of the winning work was awarded £100. Brunner died in 1995, and it is uncertain if the award has continued.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Olivette Otele</span>

Olivette Otele FLSW is an historian and distinguished research professor at SOAS in London. She was previously Professor of the History of Slavery at Bristol University. She was Vice-President of the Royal Historical Society, and Chair of Bristol's Race Equality Commission. She is an expert on the links between history, memory, and geopolitics in relation to French and British colonial pasts. She is the first Black woman to be appointed to a professorial chair in History in the United Kingdom.

Gail Lewis is a British writer, psychotherapist, researcher, and activist. She is Visiting Senior Fellow in the Department of Gender Studies at the London School of Economics, and Reader Emerita of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck College. She trained as a psychodynamic psychotherapist at the Tavistock Clinic.

<i>The Heart of the Race</i> 1985 socio-historical study book

The Heart of the Race: Black Women's Lives in Britain was a 1985 book by Beverley Bryan, Stella Dadzie and Suzanne Scafe. A socio-historical study, it looked at the realities of life for Black women in the United Kingdom after the Second World War. Although credited to Bryan, Dadzie and Scafe, they weren't the only authors of the book which was in fact written not only by those three but also by several other women in the Brixton Black Women's Group (BWG), which all three were members of. The BWG originally planned for The Heart of the Race to be credited to the "Brixton Black Women's Group" as a whole. The book's publisher Virago Press refused to use a collective name and instead credited three members of the BWG. Namely, Bryan, Dadzie and Scafe. The Heart of the Race was dedicated to Olive Morris, a co-founder of the BWG who died in 1979.

Gerlin Bean is a Jamaican community worker who was active in the radical feminist and Black nationalist movements in the United Kingdom in the 1960s and 1970s. Trained as a nurse, she became a dedicated community activist and social worker, involved in the founding of the Black Women's Action Committee of the Black Unity and Freedom Party, the women's section of the Black Liberation Front, the Brixton Black Women's Group, and the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent (OWAAD). Bean's work and activism focused on eliminating discriminatory policies for people of colour, women, and people with disabilities. She fought for equal educational opportunity, fair wages, adequate housing, and programmes that supported families, such as counselling services, child care, and health care.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Sethi, Anita (21 November 2020). "Stella Dadzie: 'Women resisted slavery at every stage of the journey'". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Swift, Jaimee A. (24 May 2020). "On The Power of Stella Dadzie: A Radical Pioneer of the Black Women's Movement in Britain". Black Women Radicals. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
  3. "Stella Dadzie interviewed by Samenua Sesher, Respect Due, Museum of Colour | Transcript" (PDF). Retrieved 30 March 2023.
  4. Hopkins, Ella (26 October 2022). "'I Hope We Keep Sending Out Shockwaves,' Says The Grandmother of Feminism Stella Dadzie". Each Other. Retrieved 30 March 2023.
  5. Ford, Tanisha (2015). "Gender Violence and Black Panther Style in 1970s London". Liberated Threads: Black Women, Style, and the Global Politics of Soul. UNC Press Books. p. 154. ISBN   9781469625164.
  6. Boles, Janet K.; Diane Long Hoeveler (2004). Historical Dictionary of Feminism. Scarecrow Press. p. 247. ISBN   978-0-8108-4946-4.
  7. Thomlinson, Natalie (2016), Thomlinson, Natalie (ed.), "Black Women's Activism, c. 1970–1990", Race, Ethnicity and the Women’s Movement in England, 1968–1993, Palgrave Studies in the History of Social Movements, London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 64–103, doi:10.1057/9781137442802_3, ISBN   978-1-137-44280-2 , retrieved 16 June 2021
  8. Ohene-Nyako, Pamela (1 September 2018). "The Heart of the Race: Black women contesting British imperialism and whiteness: Third-World feminist internationalism in Britain in the 1970s-1980s". Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies. 21 (3): 249–264. doi:10.5117/TVGN2018.3.004.OHEN. ISSN   1388-3186. S2CID   165670974.
  9. "Stella Dadzie discusses OWAAD". British Library. June 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  10. Samantrai, Ranu (1998). "The Weapons of Culture: Collective Identity and Cultural Production". In Thomas, Brooke (ed.). Literature and the Nation: Volume 14 of Yearbook of research in English and American literature. Gunter Narr Verlag. ISBN   9783823341680.
  11. 1 2 "Stella Dadzie - The British Library". British Library. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  12. "The Heart of the Race" at Verso.
  13. Siddiqui, Sophia (6 September 2018). "Still The Heart of the Race, thirty years on". Institute of Race Relations . Retrieved 24 November 2020.
  14. "The Cluster's Gender and Diversity Office presents the Intersectionality and Critical Diversity Literacy (ICDL) Lecture / Workshop Series". Bayreuth Academy of Advanced African Studies. 24 January 2020. Retrieved 23 November 2020.
  15. Cobbinah, Angela (21 January 2021). "Slavery heroines". Camden New Journal .
  16. Dadzie, Stella (20 October 2020). "The Complicated Resistance Efforts of Enslaved Women in the West Indies". LitHub . Retrieved 30 March 2023.
  17. Ono-George, Meleisa (30 October 2020). "Refusing to be cowed: How enslaved women fought back". TLS. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  18. "Black People in the British Empire by Peter Fryer | Foreword by Stella Dadzie". Pluto Press. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  19. Hairvolution: Her Hair, Her Story, Our History. Supernova Books. 15 September 2021. ISBN   978-1913641139.
  20. "Collection Browser | DADZIE - Papers of Stella Dadzie". Black Cultural Archives. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  21. "A Kick In The Belly: A Conversation with Stella Dadzie". Black Women Radicals. 17 February 2021. Retrieved 14 March 2022 via YouTube.