Abstract

Front and back cover caption, volume 37 issue 5Front coverFOOD STALL AT BRICK LANE MARKETBrick Lane is one of London's most iconic streets. Over the centuries, it has served as a refuge for Huguenots and east European Jews fleeing religious persecution, as well as Irish fleeing the famine.More recently, Bengalis, predominantly from the Sylhet area, moved to the UK because of political and economic instability at the time of Bangladesh's independence in 1971. Many settled along Brick Lane and its surrounding streets. Because of the lane's social, cultural, and economic importance to the Bangladeshi diaspora – it played a pivotal role in the renaming of the neighbourhood as Spitalfields and Banglatown in 2001, for example – some first‐generation British Bangladeshis still say, ‘There are three Bengals: west Bengal, east Bengal, and Brick Lane’.Nonetheless, this inner‐city area's working‐class identity and employment patterns are threatened by super‐gentrification in the housing, office development, and hotel and catering sectors. The effects of the Covid‐19 pandemic are amplifying these trends.In this issue, Seán Carey looks at some of the trials and tribulations of the Bangladeshi community in and around Brick Lane.Back coverBANGLADESH IN BRICK LANEStreet art on the shutters of a restaurant in Brick Lane.

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