Women, Race, & ClassRandom House, 1981 - Broj stranica: 271 "Longtime activist, author and political figure Angela Davis brings us this expose of the women's movement in the context of the fight for civil rights and working class issues. She uncovers a side of the fight for suffrage many of us have not heard: the intimate tie between the anti-slavery campaign and the struggle for women's suffrage. She shows how the racist and classist bias of some in the women's movement have divided its own membership. Davis' message is clear: If we ever want equality, we're gonna have to fight for it together."--Amazon.ca Dec. 2013. |
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Stranica 96
... workers . They have rarely been involved in the Sisyphean task of ameliorat- ing the conditions of domestic service . The convenient omission of household workers ' problems from the programs of “ middle- class " feminists past and ...
... workers . They have rarely been involved in the Sisyphean task of ameliorat- ing the conditions of domestic service . The convenient omission of household workers ' problems from the programs of “ middle- class " feminists past and ...
Stranica 98
... domestic workers and another 10.4 percent worked in non - domestic service occupations.41 Since approxi- mately 16 percent still worked in the fields , scarcely one out of ten Black women workers had really begun to escape the old grip ...
... domestic workers and another 10.4 percent worked in non - domestic service occupations.41 Since approxi- mately 16 percent still worked in the fields , scarcely one out of ten Black women workers had really begun to escape the old grip ...
Stranica 168
... workers and as wives of workers , to win recognition of the principle of industrial unionism , in such industries as ... domestic workers ' efforts to organize themselves . Because the majority of Black women work- ers were still ...
... workers and as wives of workers , to win recognition of the principle of industrial unionism , in such industries as ... domestic workers ' efforts to organize themselves . Because the majority of Black women work- ers were still ...
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STANDARDS FOR A | 3 |
THE ANTISLAVERY MOVEMENT AND THE BIRTH | 30 |
CLASS AND RACE IN THE EARLY WOMENS RIGHTS | 46 |
Autorska prava | |
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abolitionist American Anthony anti-lynching Anti-Slavery Society Aptheker argued assaults birth control Black Liberation Black people's Black rapist Black women Brownmiller campaign capitalist Claudia Jones club movement colored women Communist party convention defend demand domestic economic Elizabeth Cady Stanton Elizabeth Gurley Flynn emancipation exploitation feminist fight Frederick Douglass girls Grimke sisters History of Woman housewife housewives husband Ibid ideology industrial labor leaders Lerner Lucretia Mott Lucy Parsons lynching male supremacy Mary Church Terrell ment middle-class mother murders National NAWSA Negro North numbers oppression organized percent political published race racism role Seneca Falls Seneca Falls Convention sexism sexual slave women slaveholders slavery social Socialist party Sojourner Truth South Southern struggle suffered Susan tion United victims violence vote W. E. B. DuBois White America white sisters white women woman suffrage Women in White women's club women's movement women's rights workers working-class York