Gail Lewis (academic)


Gail Lewis is a British writer, psychotherapist, researcher, and activist. She is Visiting Senior Fellow in the Department of Gender Studies at the London School of Economics, and Reader Emerita of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck College. She trained as a psychodynamic psychotherapist at the Tavistock Clinic.
Lewis's work is rooted in black feminist and anti-racist struggle, and a socialist, anti-imperialist politics. She was a co-founder of the Organisation for Women of African and Asian Descent, and she was a member of the Brixton Black Women's Group. She was a founding collective editorial member of the Feminist Review. Lewis was interviewed for the oral history project 'Sisterhood and After: The Women's Liberation', archived at the British Library, a project that interviewed "feminists who were at the forefront of the Women’s Liberation Movement in the 1970s and 80s".

Biography and education

Lewis was born and raised in London, her mother was white and her father was from British Guiana. Her 2009 article 'Birthing Racial Difference: conversations with my mother and others' uses autobiographical references and reflections on psychoanalysis and sociology to "explore how 'race' has operated as structuring principle in Britain since the end of the Second World War", and "mixed-race, mother-child relations".
Lewis studied Social Anthropology at the London School of Economics, followed by an MPhil in Development Studies at the University of Sussex. She passed her PhD in Social Policy with the Open University, and taught in the Open University Social Sciences Faculty between 1995-2004 and 2007-2013.
Lewis is an Arsenal fan.

Career

Lewis was Reader in Psychosocial Studies in the Department of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck College until 2019, having joined the Department in 2013 and served as Assistant Dean between 2015 and 2017. She was Head of Department of the Institute of Women's Studies at Lancaster University.
She has been a visiting Scholar at Clarke University, Massachusetts, USA.
Lewis frequently contributes to feminist discussions and events: she intereviewed Hortense Spillers for the ICA in 2018.
Lewis has held many roles within academic publishing, including:
In 1998, Lewis assisted the legal team representing Duwaynne Brooks in the MacPherson Inquiry into the Murder of Stephen Lawrence. With Professor S. Hall and Dr. E. McLaughlin, Lewis co-authored a submission on racial stereotyping.
Lewis gave evidence in 2000 to the 'Commission on the Future of Multi-Ethnic Britain', published as The Parekh Report. Lewis identified the importance of gender to the future of multi-ethnic Britain and the role of social policy in social inclusion.
Writing for the Guardian for a 2014 International Women's Day piece, Lewis reflected on 'intersectionality' and 'infighting' in feminism, writing: "The current debates about intersectionality recall, if not repeat, many of the battles fought between black and Asian feminists and white feminists who felt the struggle was being diverted by the call to pay attention to the inseparability of misogyny, racism, homophobia and class. While there remains much to do to expand an intersectional understanding of the conditions that determine what it means to be a woman and who may be included, without those earlier moments of infighting, feminism today would be all the poorer."

Honours

Books