Neil A. Wynn
University of South Wales
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Featured researches published by Neil A. Wynn.
Immigrants & Minorities | 2006
Neil A. Wynn
During the Second World War some three million American service personnel came to the British Isles. Among them were more than 130,000 African-Americans who were segregated and subjected to the discrimination that crossed the Atlantic with their white countrymen. However, while many of the British hosts often welcomed the African-American GIs, the American-style Jim Crow was not welcomed. But while it has often seemed that the wartime British were free of race prejudice, treatment of troops and workers from the colonies, particularly the West Indies, suggest that this was not so. This article looks at the response to black GIs and West Indians in order to demonstrate that there was in fact greater continuity between British wartime and post-war race relations than has often appeared to be the case.
Journal of American Studies | 2004
Neil A. Wynn
The HBO television series The Sopranos, produced by David Chase, achieved unprecedented critical acclaim and quickly established itself on both sides of the Atlantic as cult viewing. The fourth series, shown in the UK on Channel 4 in spring 2003, had already attracted record audiences in America and received 13 Emmy Award nominations. Not surprisingly, The Sopranos has generated several web sites1
Archive | 2010
Neil A. Wynn
Archive | 2007
Neil A. Wynn
Archive | 2012
Jill Terry; Neil A. Wynn
Archive | 2007
Neil A. Wynn
The Journal of American History | 2012
Neil A. Wynn
Archive | 2012
Jill Terry; Neil A. Wynn
Archive | 2008
Neil A. Wynn
Journal of American Studies | 2003
Neil A. Wynn