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Power feels different when you can hold it in your hands—ink on paper, headlines on a newsstand, a community gathered on Brixton stairs. We revisit the West Indian Gazette and the force of Claudia Jones, tracing how a newspaper born from crisis became a cultural engine and a training ground for Carnival. The story begins in 1958 Britain—colour bars at pubs, landlords closing doors, employers saying no—and follows Claudia’s decision to build a people’s paper that informed, defended, and united the Caribbean diaspora.
We unpack the Gazette’s social gravity: politicians, authors, and activists passing through the office; Sam King moving bundles across the country; a readership large enough to irritate racists and encourage allies. The backlash—threats from a British Klan offshoot and vandalism—only underlined the impact. But we also sit with the operational truth: circulation spikes and cash dips, volunteers carrying dual jobs, and the hard pivot required to turn social influence into structural power. That contrast with later institutions like the Voice helps us explore why editorial courage must meet financial discipline to outlive a founder.
From there, the conversation widens to strategy. Under the Gazette’s sponsorship, the 1959 Caribbean Carnival reframed politics through culture and joy, even making it onto the BBC. Claudia understood that newspapers set agendas, but carnivals change the air people breathe. Across these threads—media, organising, celebration—we keep returning to a working definition of power: influence, leadership, and the capacity to effect positive change. It’s a lineage that still shapes Black British media and community life today.
If this journey reshaped how you think about Black British history, media, and Carnival, share the episode with a friend, leave a review, and subscribe so you don’t miss part two. Your support helps this story travel further.
By Kayne Kawasaki5
44 ratings
Let me know your thoughts…
Power feels different when you can hold it in your hands—ink on paper, headlines on a newsstand, a community gathered on Brixton stairs. We revisit the West Indian Gazette and the force of Claudia Jones, tracing how a newspaper born from crisis became a cultural engine and a training ground for Carnival. The story begins in 1958 Britain—colour bars at pubs, landlords closing doors, employers saying no—and follows Claudia’s decision to build a people’s paper that informed, defended, and united the Caribbean diaspora.
We unpack the Gazette’s social gravity: politicians, authors, and activists passing through the office; Sam King moving bundles across the country; a readership large enough to irritate racists and encourage allies. The backlash—threats from a British Klan offshoot and vandalism—only underlined the impact. But we also sit with the operational truth: circulation spikes and cash dips, volunteers carrying dual jobs, and the hard pivot required to turn social influence into structural power. That contrast with later institutions like the Voice helps us explore why editorial courage must meet financial discipline to outlive a founder.
From there, the conversation widens to strategy. Under the Gazette’s sponsorship, the 1959 Caribbean Carnival reframed politics through culture and joy, even making it onto the BBC. Claudia understood that newspapers set agendas, but carnivals change the air people breathe. Across these threads—media, organising, celebration—we keep returning to a working definition of power: influence, leadership, and the capacity to effect positive change. It’s a lineage that still shapes Black British media and community life today.
If this journey reshaped how you think about Black British history, media, and Carnival, share the episode with a friend, leave a review, and subscribe so you don’t miss part two. Your support helps this story travel further.