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Books About African American Women and Feminist Theory

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Feminism in the 1960s and 1970s made a difference in the life of women in the United States, but the womens movement is often remembered as being too white. Many black feminists responded to the womens liberation movement and the cries of sisterhood with writings that critically analyzed the second wave of feminism or provided missing pieces of the puzzle. Here is a list of five important books about African-American feminism:

Racism, the feminist “sisterhood,” myths about women, Black consciousness, history, literature and theory combine in this interdisciplinary anthology.

A collection of nearly 20 years of Alice Walkers writing about the civil rights and peace movements, feminist theory, families, white society, black writers and the “womanist” tradition.

Source: ThoughtCo

Southern United States Facts

  • Ebony Magazine
  • Confederacy
  • (1875) Congressman John R. Lynch, “Speech on the Civil Rights Bill”
  • (1919) William Pickens, “The Kind of Democracy the Negro Expects”
  • Clayton, Eva (1934- )
  • Claflin University [South Carolina] (1869 - )
  • John Roy Lynch, served in the 43rd, 44th, and 47th Congresses representing the S
  • The Power of the Press: African-American News Publications in the Jim Crow Era
  • (1874) Congressman Richard Harvey Cain, “All We Ask Is Equal Laws, Equal Legislation And Equal Rights”
  • Johnson, Charles (1948-- )

Democratic Party Facts

  • O’Neal, Adrienne S. (1954- )
  • The 101 Most Influential Novels Written by African Americans
  • Walls, Josiah Thomas (1832–1905)
  • Keyes, Alan L. (1950- )
  • Ellis, William Henry (1864-1923)
  • Christensen, Donna Marie (1945–)
  • John W. Davis
  • Running for President: George Edwin Taylor, 1904
  • Holloway, Anne Forrester (1941- 2006)
  • (1984) Rev. Jesse Jackson, “The Rainbow Coalition”

Washington DC Facts

  • I have a dream - Martin Luther King and the March on Washington in full HD
  • Barack Obama's 923 Executive Orders - Urban Legends
  • Million Man March
  • Charles Drew, born
  • Adu, Freddy (1989-- )

Arts Facts

  • James DuBose Talks Building Fox Soul From the Ground Up
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