October is Black History Month
October is Black History Month
An awareness of diversity, multi-ethnicity, race and diverse cultural narratives should be ever-present in our historical narratives. In schools and other educational environments this should be even more important. That is why we want to use Black History Month to celebrate the breadth and depth of Black culture and history.
This month is an opportunity to explore some of the richness and the many different dimensions of British, European and global Black histories along with their cultural manifestation and legacies. That is not to say that the difficult and often traumatic reality of racism and racist attitudes that have led to a collective ignorance or dismissal of Black history are to be ignored – quite the opposite; those attitudes and ideas have to be addressed in a progressive society. It is simply that this month should not be about tackling racism merely through tokenistic vignettes of men and women, but rather by educating everyone from all backgrounds of the importance of knowing about Black histories as an integral part of the study of human history. Through exploring the past in this way, everyone can become informed about people, ideas and lives that they may have known little or nothing about previously, and so can come to appreciate those members of Black communities of the past who have helped to shape the world in which we all live.
It is true that we shouldn’t have to rely on a single designated month to ensure that those diverse histories are covered, and that is why the HA has been a strong advocate as well as resource provider for ensuring that Black history is something that is addressed in general histories and integrated throughout the whole curriculum and throughout the whole year. It is why we have facilitated CPD to help educators understand the issues affecting the teaching of Black History, as well as CPD that provides knowledge and understanding of how to ensure that it is taught well across the year groups.
Therefore, Black History Month can be something else; it can be a triumphant listen to the many stories that make up this history so that you can decide how to expand on them further during the remaining 11 months of a learning year. October is a focal point to celebrate diversity, not to deconstruct it but to admire it, to breathe it in, to recognise and value the significance of Black history and how it is part of all our histories and our cultural reality.
The following are a small selection of resources, articles and podcasts for different audiences (please note that most require the relevant HA Membership type to access):
Historian – General audience
- Medlicott Lecture 2022 - David Olusoga, plus article on David's talk in HA News
- Lecture recording: Writing Black histories, telling Black stories
- Lecture recording: West Africa from the Rise of the Slave Trade to the Age of Revolution
- See also podcasts listed below
Secondary
- Lecture recording: Writing Black histories, telling Black stories
- Lecture recording: West Africa from the Rise of the Slave Trade to the Age of Revolution
- Triumphs Show 173: Teaching Black Tudors
- Cunning Plan 173: using Black Tudors as a window into Tudor England
- Beyond tokenism: diverse history post-14
- Northamptonshire in a Global Context
- Hidden histories and heroism: post-14 course on multi-cultural Britain since 1945
- The Kingdom of Benin 1500-1750
For more, see our page of Diversity resources for Secondary history, particularly the section on Race and ethnicity.
Primary
- Lecture recording: Writing Black histories, telling Black stories
- Lecture recording: West Africa from the Rise of the Slave Trade to the Age of Revolution
- Schemes of work on Walter Tull (open access) and Sarah Forbes Bonetta
- Resource: Walter Tull - Sport, war and challenging adversity
- Article: Arthur Wharton - the world's first professional black football player
- History in the News: George Floyd protest in Bristol
- Northamptonshire in a Global Context
- The Kingdom of Benin 1500-1750
For more, see our page of Resources for Diversity in primary history, particularly the section on Race and ethnicity.
Podcasts
(All podcasts are accessible to all HA members)
- An introduction to 20th century African and Caribbean British history
- An introduction to 19th century African and Caribbean British history
- African and Caribbean British history: Georgian period
- African and Caribbean British history: Stuart period
- African and Caribbean British history: Tudor period
- African and Caribbean British political activists
- The Songhay Empire 1450-1591
- The Kingdom of Kongo 1400-1709
- The Kingdom of Benin 1500-1750
- The Kingdoms and Empires of Oyo and Dahomey 1608-1800
- Booker T. Washington
- Steve Biko and the Soweto Revolt (uprising)