Event

Songs of Seven Dials, *Shared Seminar with Modern British History*

Date
27 Nov 2025
Time
11:45 UK time
Speakers
Matt Houlbrook
Where
Radcliffe Observatory, History Seminar Room, Schwarzman Centre
Series
Centre for Women’s, Gender, Identity, and Queer History events (WGIQ)[formerly known as CGIS].
Audience
Members of the University only
Booking
Not required
_Songs of Seven Dials_ shares the untold story of a remarkable neighbourhood and the battle to define modern London. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, Seven Dials was one of London's most diverse neighbourhoods, home to migrant and working-class communities, bohemian clubs and cafes. But business leaders and city planners had other ideas.

Beginning with a rancorous libel trial of 1927, in which a Sierra Leonean café owner and his wife confronted the racist newspaper that destroyed their business, Matt Houlbrook’s new book reveals the surprising history of this remarkable neighbourhood. He traces how tensions that simmered on the streets and finally exploded in court betrayed the politics of urban 'improvement' and the 'colour bar'. Underlying the trial was a series of troubling questions that would define Britain in the twentieth century - about race, class and the boundaries of belonging, gentrification and the kind of city London would become. Imaginative, powerful, and deeply moving, _Songs of Seven Dials_ is an important new history of London in the 1920s and 1930s.