"Ardays Cool Britannia is both a brave cultural history and a deeply personal odyssey. Retrieving the 1990s from retro sentimentality, Arday reminds us that the decade of Brit pop and girl power was also an era of discriminatory policing, hostile immigration policy and the murder of Stephen Lawrence. A necessary corrective to the Brit nostalgia and historical amnesia that mark our present day."
Prof. Paul Warmington, University of Warwick
"A must-read for anybody seeking the truth of Britains uncomfortable relationship with race, as well as for those who are yet to wake up. Offering an unfiltered and at times deeply confronting reflection on British culture, Jason Ardays Cool Britannia is a brave and powerful antidote to our collective amnesia."
Rt. Hon David Lammy MP, Member of Parliament for Tottenham
"Cool Britannia and Multi-Ethnic Britain: Uncorking the Champagne Supernova provides a striking and powerful counter-argument to the romanticised view of the '90s, currently imagined so fondly as the past we have lost to Brexit nationalism. As Arday shows, diversity was cynically used as a slogan to distract from the reality of racism, oppression and broken-promises."
Prof. David Gillborn, Centre for Research in Race & Education (CRRE), University of Birmingham
"In this timely and engaging book, Jason Arday writes with the passion and purpose. He brings the perspectives of people of colour from margin to centre in order to offer an important counter-narrative to the melancholic historicization of The Cool Britannia Years. Touching on key historical moments in the popular imaginary, and weaving through his own personal experiences, Jason Arday encourages us to see the institutional racisms that society is too quick to forget."
Dr. Remi Joseph-Salisbury, University of Manchester
"The vivid soundtrack of Ardays stylish youth comes alive in these pages. While you feel the beat of bands like Oasis and New Order signalling the euphoria and optimism of the Post-Thatcher New Labour era, Arday deftly reveals the Other story of the underbelly of racial violence, fear and discrimination that marked the life of so many young black men, culminating in the death of Stephen Lawrence. If you grew up or lived through the 1990s you will not fail to be moved by this eloquent unwritten song of the myth of multicultural Britain."
Emeritus Prof. Heidi Safia Mirza, University of London
"In this insightful book, Jason Arday reflects upon a period in which he came of age. While the 1990s represented a welcome rupture from the torpor of the previous decade, the cheer leaders of 'Cool Britannia' overstated, it is argued, the inclusivity of the new era. Forensically examining the period through a minority lens, Jason convincingly demonstrates the prevalence of institutional racism and how minority ethnic groups continued to be marginalised."
Prof. Andrew Pilkington, University of Northampton