 My name's Naomi, and I'm doing a collaborative doctoral partnership with the British Library and UCL, which is funded by AHRC. My research looks at Caribbean publishing, particularly black and Caribbean publishers in post-war Britain, but also searching for the longer story of Caribbean publishing since the early 19th century. I'd never heard of a collaborative doctoral partnership, and it immediately sounded really appealing to me that it's combining both university, cultural heritage, and it opens your options out. At UCL, I've been based at the Institute of the Americas, and I've had really brilliant supervision there. Being part of an interdisciplinary area studies department has opened me up to meet different types of people, doing really broad research and thinking about how the Caribbean relates to other places in the Americas. UCL has provided me with very thorough, detailed academic supervision. And I've also had that at the British Library, but I think what's been different is that my British Library supervisors have focused more on how actually to get my research further out there to broader audiences. I helped with the Windrush exhibition. Having that opportunity to funnel my research into a public-facing exhibition was a unique once-in-a-lifetime experience. I think the British Library is being my second home, and I love being here. Just having all this stuff at your fingertips is really a unique experience. Being here and getting to be behind the scenes is so special.