In the UK, “archive fever” continues and makes itself most apparent in book publishing. In a 1994 lecture, Derrida described this eagerness as ”a compulsive, repetitive, and nostalgic desire for the archive, an irrepressible desire to return to the origin.” This kind of zeal is also what led British scholar Milo Miller, the editor of Speak Out!: The Brixton Black Women’s Group, to attend both to South London’s squatting history since the 1970s, which is the topic of his PhD thesis, and the fragmented social history of Black women in Britain, the themes of this book. The two are undisputedly entwined, most illustriously through the brief but full life of Jamaican-born and Brixton-raised radical activist Olive Morris.