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Opinion
Sharan Dhaliwal
Sharan Dhaliwal is a British-Indian woman who was working in the Houses of Parliament on March 22nd when it was attacked by Khalid Masood.
Roisin Lanigan
Róisín Lanigan writes of growing up in a divided Belfast. Between British and Irish, Catholic and Protestant, and a younger generation railing against a conservative, religious establishment.
Tom Rasmussen
Tom Rasmussen’s definition of Britishness was formed growing up gender non-conforming in the matriarchal nail salons of Lancaster.
Caspar Baldwin
Caspar Baldwin explores what it means to have grown up trans in Britain, and to live in a country where much of mainstream media blasts out transphobic abuse.
Ciaran Thapar
For Ciaran Thapar, a mixed race youth worker living in Brixton, Britishness is an endless pilgrimage back and forth between different sets of opposing poles.
Hydall Codeen
For writer Hydall Codeen, Britain today has become the embodiment of an irresolvable argument.
Clive Martin
Journalist Clive Martin left London in 2017, disenchanted by the city he grew up in. In search of an alternative Britain, he headed for the north.
Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff
Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff is the deputy editor of ‘Gal-dem’. Her debut book, ‘Mother Country’, looks at what Britishness means to the children and grandchildren of the Windrush generation.
Candice Carty-Williams
Candice Carty-Williams’s debut novel ‘Queenie’ tells the story of a 25-year-old black woman living in London, straddling two cultures.
The Superstar Issue
i-D Magazine
Photographer Sam Rock and i-D Fashion Editor Max Clark travelled from Dover to Liverpool, the two closest points in Britain to Europe, to chronicle the beauty and diversity of Britain today.
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