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The Negro Question, the Woman Question, and the “Vital Link”
by
CHERYL HIGASHIDA
in
African American culture
/ African American studies
/ African Americans
/ American minorities
/ American studies
/ Anthropology
/ Behavioral sciences
/ Black militancy
/ Communism
/ Ethnic groups
/ Ethnography
/ Ethnology
/ Human behavior
/ Human populations
/ Human rights
/ Human societies
/ Internationalism
/ Jurisprudence
/ Law
/ Natural law
/ Natural rights
/ Persons
/ Philosophy of law
/ Political ideologies
/ Political movements
/ Political philosophy
/ Political science
/ Political sociology
/ Population studies
/ Social activism
/ Social sciences
/ Sociology
/ Violence
/ Violence against women
/ Women
/ Womens rights
/ Working women
2011
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The Negro Question, the Woman Question, and the “Vital Link”
by
CHERYL HIGASHIDA
in
African American culture
/ African American studies
/ African Americans
/ American minorities
/ American studies
/ Anthropology
/ Behavioral sciences
/ Black militancy
/ Communism
/ Ethnic groups
/ Ethnography
/ Ethnology
/ Human behavior
/ Human populations
/ Human rights
/ Human societies
/ Internationalism
/ Jurisprudence
/ Law
/ Natural law
/ Natural rights
/ Persons
/ Philosophy of law
/ Political ideologies
/ Political movements
/ Political philosophy
/ Political science
/ Political sociology
/ Population studies
/ Social activism
/ Social sciences
/ Sociology
/ Violence
/ Violence against women
/ Women
/ Womens rights
/ Working women
2011
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Do you wish to request the book?
The Negro Question, the Woman Question, and the “Vital Link”
by
CHERYL HIGASHIDA
in
African American culture
/ African American studies
/ African Americans
/ American minorities
/ American studies
/ Anthropology
/ Behavioral sciences
/ Black militancy
/ Communism
/ Ethnic groups
/ Ethnography
/ Ethnology
/ Human behavior
/ Human populations
/ Human rights
/ Human societies
/ Internationalism
/ Jurisprudence
/ Law
/ Natural law
/ Natural rights
/ Persons
/ Philosophy of law
/ Political ideologies
/ Political movements
/ Political philosophy
/ Political science
/ Political sociology
/ Population studies
/ Social activism
/ Social sciences
/ Sociology
/ Violence
/ Violence against women
/ Women
/ Womens rights
/ Working women
2011
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The Negro Question, the Woman Question, and the “Vital Link”
Book Chapter
The Negro Question, the Woman Question, and the “Vital Link”
2011
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Overview
Feminism, Marxism, and Black nationalism have had contentious relationships with each other, to say the least. How is it, then, that the Communist Party’s theory and tactics of African American nationhood gave rise to the Black internationalist feminist tradition that came into its own in the post–World War II era? This chapter investigates the histories of African American involvement with the Communist Left that shaped Black women writers’ strategic commitments to national liberation as they strove to represent emancipatory enactments of gender and sexuality. I begin by discussing the intertwining of Black nationalist and Old Left movements in the
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