Abstract
This contribution to a roundtable on Satnam Virdee's recent Racism, Class and the Racialized Outsider praises the range, coherence and method of the book's unprecedented synthetic account. It argues that Virdee's careful consideration of race, nationality and migration changes the whole story of the working-class movement in Britain. The article closes by wondering whether the author's optimism regarding the fostering of solidarity in the recent past can fully survive scrutiny.
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