In a society where race is a significant component of social identity
and exerts an important influence on social relationships, the problems
faced by couples who enter into 'mixed' marriages are especially
difficult. The book is a study of the personal histories and everyday
lives of a small number of interracial families living in and around
Brixton, south London, in the early 1970s. Dr Benson sets the
circumstances that confront these families within the context of wider
British attitudes about race, colour and miscegenation as they developed
over time. She argues that couples are obliged to make a continual
series of choices between 'black' and 'white' in the course of their
everyday lives. Through a discussion of these choices and of the factors
which lead individuals to enter into a marriage which could be regarded
with some disapproval, the book explores how people in London thought
and felt about race, colour and social identity. It will be of interest
to all teachers and students studying race relations, as well as to
social and community workers, school teachers and administrators
concerned with race relations and the inner city.