Stephen Bourne (writer)

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Stephen Bourne
London College of Printing;
De Montfort University
Website
www.stephenbourne.co.uk

Stephen Bourne (born 31 October 1957) is a British writer, film and social historian specialising in Black heritage and gay culture.

Career

He was a research officer at the British Film Institute on a project that documented the history of Black people in British television.[1]

Bourne with his book Black Poppies

In 2014, Bourne's book Black Poppies: Britain's Black Community and the Great War[2] was published by The History Press.[3] Reviewing it in The Independent, Bernardine Evaristo said: "Until historians and cultural map-makers stop ignoring the historical presence of people of colour, books such as this one provide a powerful, revelatory counterbalance to the whitewashing of British history."[4]

Following the publication of the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities in March 2021, Bourne revealed he was listed as a contributor to the report without his knowledge, stating that he felt manipulated.[5][6][7]

Awards

In 2002 Bourne received the Metropolitan Police Volunteer Award for his work as independent adviser on critical incidents. In 2013 Bourne was nominated for a Southwark Heritage

Blue Plaque for his work as a community historian and Southwark Police independent adviser.[8] He came second with 1,025 votes.[citation needed
]

In May 2017, he was honoured at the 12th

Screen Nation Awards for his work on the history of Black Britons in film and television.[9] In 2017 he received an Honorary Fellowship from London South Bank University.[10][11]

TV and radio

Bourne's radio appearances have included Miss Lou at RADA (2005) with

BBC2, 2016) and Home Front Heroes (More4, 2016).[citation needed
]

In 2018, Bourne was interviewed about his Evelyn Dove photograph collection for BBC1's Antiques Roadshow. In 2021, he was interviewed about Evelyn Dove, Adelaide Hall and Ken "Snakehips" Johnson in the series The Definitive History of Jazz in Britain, presented by Clive Myrie for Jazz FM. In 2022, Bourne paid tribute to Sidney Poitier in BBC Radio 4's Last Word, was interviewed about Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's daughter, the composer and conductor Avril Coleridge-Taylor in BBC Radio 3's Hidden Women and Silenced Scores and contributed to BBC Radio 4's Great Lives profile of Ira Aldridge.[citation needed]

In 1993, for Salutations, Bourne received a Race in the Media Award for Best Radio Documentary from the

Leslie "Jiver" Hutchinson, Ken "Snakehips" Johnson, Cyril Blake, Rudolph Dunbar, Fela Sowande, Edric Connor, Winifred Atwell, Ray Ellington, Cy Grant, Geoff Love and Shirley Bassey. The following year, Bourne received a second CRE award in the same category for Black in the West End, a celebration of Black musical theatre in London's West End.[citation needed
]

Black British theatre

Bourne was the recipient of a Wingate Scholarship in 2011.[12]

Publications

Contributor

References

External links