E.J.B. Rose et al., Colour and Citizenship: a report on British Race Relations (London, Oxford University Press for the Institute of Race Relations, 1969), p. 5. cf. Nicholas Deakin, Colour, Citizenship and British Society (London, Panther , 1970), p. 15.
4.
Michael Banton, White and Coloured (London, Cape , 1959).
5.
Anthony H. Richmond, The Colour Problem (Harmondsworth, Penguin, first edition 1955), cf, pp. 240-2.
6.
Race (Vol. 1, No. 1, November 1959), p. 9.
7.
'Social Distance: a new appreciation', Sociological Review (n.s. 8, 1960), p. 170.
8.
This is recapitulated in my Race Relations (London, Tavistock, 1967), pp. 332-3.
9.
Race (Vol. 1, No. 1, November 1959), p. 13.
10.
White and Coloured, p. 106. This passage is more directly related to the 'stranger hypothesis' in my talk 'Beware of Strangers!', printed in The Listener (Vol. 59, No. 1514, 3 April 1958), pp. 565-7. Mr. Paul Pollard has described two West Indian groups in London as perceiving the local English people as strangers, for similar reasons; see 'Jamaicans and Trinidadians in North London', New Community (No. 1, 1972), p.375.
11.
Sami Zubaida in his introduction to Race and Racialism (London , Tavistock, 1970), p. 5, refers to the explanation of attitudes in terms of cultural strangeness but does not pinpoint the elements in Sheila Patterson's work which he appears to be criticizing or relate what he has in mind to what I actually wrote.