In the context of a diversified and pluralistic arena of contemporary
literature embodying previously marginalized voices of region,
ethnicity, gender, and class, black poets living in Britain developed a
distinct branch of contemporary poetry. Having emerged from a struggle
to give voice to marginalized groups in Britain, the poetry of Linton
Kwesi Johnson, David Dabydeen, and Fred D'Aguiar helped define national
identity and explored racial oppression. Motivated by a sense of
responsibility towards their communities, these poets undertook the task
of transmitting black history to young blacks who risked losing ties to
their roots. They also emphasized the necessity of fighting racism by
constructing an awareness of Afro-Caribbean national identity while
establishing black cultural heritage in contemporary British poetry. In
this book, Turkish literary scholar Dilek Bulut Sarıkaya examines their
works. Linton Kwesi Johnson's Voices of the Living and the Dead
(1974), Inglan is a Bitch (1980), and Tings an Times (1991) open the
study, followed by David Dabydeen's Slave Song (1984), Coolie
Odyssey (1988), and Turner (1994) and, finally, Fred D'Aguiar's Mama
Dot (1985), Airy Hall (1989) and British Subjects (1993).