The Good Immigrant
The Good Immigrant is an anthology of twenty-one essays edited by Nikesh Shukla and first published by Unbound in the UK in 2016 after a crowd-funding campaign endorsed by celebrities. Written by British authors who identify as BAME, the essays concern race, immigration, identity, 'otherness', exploring the experience of immigrant and ethnic minority life in the United Kingdom from their perspective. Contributors include actor/musician Riz Ahmed, journalist Reni Eddo-Lodge, comedian Nish Kumar and playwright Vinay Patel. The compilation inspired the American sequel The Good Immigrant USA, published in 2017, which featured BAME authors from the United States.
Summary
The Good Immigrant is a book of 21 essays by BAME writers, described by Sandeep Parmar in The Guardian as "an unflinching dialogue about race and racism in the UK", which aims to "document… what it means to be a person of colour now" in light of what Shukla notes in the book's foreword "the backwards attitude to immigration and refugees the systematic racism that runs through ". Written by twenty-one British authors of Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic backgrounds, The Good Immigrant explores the personal and universal experiences of immigrant and ethnic minority life in the United Kingdom. Shukla's book tells stories of "anger, displacement, defensiveness, curiosity, absurdity" as well as "death, class, microaggression, popular culture, access, freedom of movement, stake in society, lingual fracas, masculinity, and more".Contributors
- Nikesh Shukla: Namaste
- Varaidzo: A Guide to Being Black
- Chimene Suleyman: My Name is My Name
- Vera Chok: Yellow
- Daniel York Loh: Kendo Nagasaki and Me
- Himesh Patel: Window of Opportunity
- Nish Kumar: Is Nish Kumar a Confused Muslim?
- Reni Eddo-Lodge: Forming Blackness Through a Screen
- Wei Ming Kam: Beyond 'Good' Immigrants
- Darren Chetty: You Can't Say That! Stories Have to Be About White People
- Kieran Yates: On Going Home
- Coco Khan: Flags
- Inua Ellams: Cutting Through
- Sabrina Mahfouz: Wearing Where You're At: Immigrant and U.K. Fashion
- Riz Ahmed: Airports and Auditions
- Sarah Sahim: Perpetuating Casteism
- Salena Godden: Shade
- Miss L: The Wife of a Terrorist
- Bim Adewunmi: What We Talk About When We Talk About Tokenism
- Vinay Patel: Death is a Many Headed Monster
- Musa Okwonga: ''The Ungrateful Country''
Reception
Similarly, another review written by Sandeep Parmar for The Guardian judged the book as "an unflinching dialogue about race and racism in the UK". continuing to say: "We should recognise both the courage that has been shown in producing these essays and the contradictions that necessarily exist across them. While, inevitably, some are better crafted and more convincing than others, The Good Immigrant helps to open up a much-needed space of open and unflinching dialogue about race and racism in the UK."
Arifa Akbar, writing in The Financial Times, thought that J. K. Rowling's involvement in fund raising for the collection contained "whisperings of white saviourism" but that despite that, "the book reads like an uncompromised work" that summarises "experiences of racism or racial pigeonholing".
The book reached the top-10 non-fiction charts in both UK and US editions and was number 1 on Amazon non-fiction in the UK for a short period.
It was voted the winner in the Books Are My Bag Readers' Awards.
Coco Khan's essay, Flags, was recorded as a BBC Book of the Week, and broadcast in 2016.
Crowdfunding
In an interview at the Edinburgh Festival, Shukla stressed that the inception of this book was borne from "gatekeeping" within the publishing industry and a desire to see diverse opinions on bookshelves rather than just diversity panels. To achieve this, Shukla worked with Unbound, a British publishing house which utilises crowdfunding to enable the publication of "books readers want". In an interview with multi-national newspaper The Guardian, Unbound's co-founder John Mitchinson stated that crowdfunding means that "the handwringing that usually surrounds this issue is replaced by positive action on the part of both contributors and potential readers."The Good Immigrant reached its funding target in just three days after receiving public support from the notable authors J.K. Rowling, David Nicholls, Jonathan Coe and Evie Wyld who were amongst the book's 470 supporters. Rowling has received a dedication in the book, after her public support of The Good Immigrant with a tweet which stated that it was "an important, timely read". Nicholls also publicly endorsed The Good Immigrant stating that "I did want to support the project because it's an important subject, and not something I know enough about."
Sequel - The Good Immigrant USA (2019)
Following the success of The Good Immigrant, Nikesh Shukla and Chimene Suleyman solicited contributions from American minority writers, actors, comedians, directors, and artists. The Good Immigrant USA - 26 writers reflect on America was published by Dialogue Books in 2019, and includes the contributions of twenty-six Americans of colour.Contributors
- Porochista Khakpour How to Write Iranian-America, or The Last Essay
- Nicole Dennis-Benn Swimmer
- Rahawa Haile Sidra
- Teju Cole On the Blackness of the Panther
- Priya Minhas How Not to Be
- Walé Oyéjidé After Migration: The Once and Future Kings
- Fatimah Asghar On Loneliness
- Tejal Rao Chooey-Booey and Brown
- Maeve Higgins Luck of the Irish
- Krutika Mallikarjuna Her Name Was India
- Jim St. Germain Shithole Nation
- Jenny Zhang Blond Girls in Cheongsams
- Chigozie Obioma The Naked Man
- Alexander Chee Your Father's Country
- Yann Demange The Long Answer
- Jean Hannah Edelstein An American, Told
- Chimene Suleyman On Being Kim Kardashian
- Basim Usmani Tour Diary
- Daniel José Older Dispatches from the Language Wars
- Adrián Villar Rojas and Sebastián Villar Rojas Juana Azurduy Versus Christopher Columbus
- Dani Fernandez No Es Suficiente
- Fatima Farheen Mirza Skittles
- Susanne Ramírez de Arellano Return to Macondo
- Mona Chalabi 244 Million
- Jade Chang ''How to Center Your Own Story''
The Good Immigrant - The Netherlands (2020)
Contributors
- Quinsy Gario
- Manju Reijmer
- Nina Köll
- Clark Accord
- Sarah Bekkali
- Mojdeh Feili
- Jeanette Chedda
- Richard Kofi
- Khadija Boujbira
- Simone Zeefuik
- Olave Nduwanje
- Tirsa With
- Dino Suhonic
- Mia You
- Hasret Emine
- Zaïre Krieger
- Deborah Cameron
- Yael van der Wouden
- Rita Ouédraogo
- Zouhair Hammana
- Nancy Jouwe
- Fatima Faïd