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We Were There

How Black culture and community shaped modern Britain

Lanre Bakare

$35

Paperback

Forthcoming
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English
Vintage
16 May 2026
Urgent, pioneering and alive with energy, this is the story of Black Britain that for too long has been overlooked - the one that exists beyond London
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*AN OBSERVER, GQ, ESQUIRE AND INEWS BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR
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This is the lost story of a hidden Britain. A Black Britain. One that existed outside London and rewrites our idea of British culture.

Rocked by economic turmoil, the rise of the National Front, heavy-handed anti-immigration policies and widespread civil unrest, Thatcher's Britain was in tumult. And yet, all around this nation, Black creativity, community and resistance flourished like never before.

From Bradford's towering mills and Northern Soul's euphoric dance floors to the multicultural docks of Cardiff Bay and rolling hills of rural Britain, from Rastafarians and rugby stars to artists and activists, Lanre Bakare unearths the overlooked places and people who made Britain what it is today. Alive with energy and purpose, We Were There is a dazzling, profoundly important new portrait of modern Britain and a shared legacy which belongs to us all.
By:  
Imprint:   Vintage
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 131mm,  Spine: 27mm
Weight:   268g
ISBN:   9781529931334
ISBN 10:   1529931339
Pages:   384
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  ELT Advanced ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming

Lanre Bakare is the arts and culture correspondent for the Guardian, where his writing focuses on the intersection of art, race and culture across multiple disciplines. He was senior correspondent on the Cotton Capital project - an expose on the Guardian's founders' links to transatlantic slavery and was recognised at the Press Awards as a 'breathtakingly honest mea culpa'. He was born and grew up in Bradford, West Yorkshire.

Reviews for We Were There: How Black culture and community shaped modern Britain

We Were There is a vital corrective that enhances our understanding of Black British history in the 20th century by moving the narrative outside of London -- Steve McQueen Lanre Bakare’s first book is not just a work of history – it is a necessary and urgent recalibration of the way we think about Black Britain… an expansive, deeply researched work that insists on a broader, richer understanding of Black life * Guardian * [Bakare writes] with quiet enthusiasm and sharp intelligence about black communities, including those in Bradford, Wolverhampton, Manchester, Liverpool, Cardiff and Edinburgh … We Were There bridges the gaps to missing links and admirably achieves what it sets out to provide: further evidence of Black people’s influence on the UK * Observer * Like much of how we view and discuss history in the UK, the story of Black Britain often has a London bias. But as Guardian writer Lanre Bakare's book explores, there is a rich story to be told outside the capital too ... A joyous and fascinating corrective * GQ Magazine *best books of 2025* * The premise of this non-fiction book is a deceptively simple one: to consider the influence of Black culture in modern Britain, and, critically, beyond London ... It's a part of Britain's collective heritage that has been woefully underreported and makes for a book that is fact-packed and fascinating * Esquire *best books of 2025 so far* * We Were There is an essential, unique and joyful contribution to the full understanding of Black Britain. It broadens our story and ensures that the scale of our influence across the UK is fully recognised and appreciated. Utterly brilliant -- Dipo Faloyin, author of Africa Is Not A Country An urgent conversation about Britishness and the breadth of Black British experience [that] will take us on affecting and insightful journeys -- Arifa Akbar, author of Consumed Lanre Bakare takes us on a rare journey, rearranging our understanding of Britain’s racial geography with an open mind, perceptive eye and an accessible style. An incisive book at an important time -- Gary Younge, author of Dispatches from the Diaspora Genuinely pioneering and transformative histories only come along rarely, but Lanre Bakare's wonderfully immersive, wide-ranging account of the years when Black Britian acquired its own agency is undoubtedly such -- David Kynaston, author of A Northern Wind [A] meaty social history study [with] interesting things to say about race and class ... Packed with revealing content * Independent *


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