Sojourning for Freedom: Black Women, American Communism, and the Making of Black Left Feminism
by Erik S. McDuffie
Duke University Press, 2011 Paper: 978-0-8223-5050-7 | eISBN: 978-0-8223-9440-2 | Cloth: 978-0-8223-5033-0 Library of Congress Classification E185.86.M3125 2011 Dewey Decimal Classification 305.48896073
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Sojourning for Freedom portrays pioneering black women activists from the early twentieth century through the 1970s, focusing on their participation in the U.S. Communist Party (CPUSA) between 1919 and 1956. Erik S. McDuffie considers how women from diverse locales and backgrounds became radicalized, joined the CPUSA, and advocated a pathbreaking politics committed to black liberation, women’s rights, decolonization, economic justice, peace, and international solidarity. McDuffie explores the lives of black left feminists, including the bohemian world traveler Louise Thompson Patterson, who wrote about the “triple exploitation” of race, gender, and class; Esther Cooper Jackson, an Alabama-based civil rights activist who chronicled the experiences of black female domestic workers; and Claudia Jones, the Trinidad-born activist who emerged as one of the Communist Party’s leading theorists of black women’s exploitation. Drawing on more than forty oral histories collected from veteran black women radicals and their family members, McDuffie examines how these women negotiated race, gender, class, sexuality, and politics within the CPUSA. In Sojourning for Freedom, he depicts a community of radical black women activist intellectuals who helped to lay the foundation for a transnational modern black feminism.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Erik S. McDuffie is Associate Professor of African American Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
REVIEWS
“Radical black women had to challenge both the CP's sexism and its racism, and McDuffie provides a judicious and finely tuned analysis of black
women's complicated relationship with the Party. . . . One of the great breakthroughs of McDuffie's book is his careful examination of personal testimonies, which like any narratives, demand analysis.” - Mary Helen Washington, Women’s Review of Books
“By the end of Sojourning for Freedom, black left feminism appears not as a reaction to Moynihan and masculinism in the 1960s, but as an intergenerational radical tradition that forged critiques of gendered racial capitalism in the previous century, before providing an influential framework for thinking about the interlocking of oppressions for our own era. But enough of this review. Go and read this very valuable book for yourself!” - John J. Munro, H-1960s, H-Net Reviews
“Sojourning for Freedom is a groundbreaking monograph, especially for a historian’s first book. Based on impressive archival research as well as forty oral histories conducted by the author, this book will change the way historians conceptualize black women’s activism in the Old Left and the New Left.” - Anne Meis Knupfer, Journal of American History
“Sojourning for Freedom is a fine scholarly work... McDuffie’s eloquent, but succinct, prose allows for easy reading… the book should spur penetrating discussions in undergraduate and graduate courses devoted to history, politics, women/gender studies, and sociology. Indeed, Sojourning for Freedom affords endless opportunities for students and professors alike to articulate interesting view-points about the black feminist ideology and American communism from the early through the middle twentieth century.” - Brenda I. Marshall, The Griot: The Journal of African American Studies
“Sojourning for Freedom is an excellent primer on the communist party and
the Cold War in the United States as it relates to the eye-opening participation and motivations of black left feminists. It should be required reading in undergraduate and graduate courses covering this content area, as well as appealing to a general reading audience.” - Dolita Cathcart, History: Reviews of New Books
“[I]lluminate[s] the ways that gender, race, and class intersected to shape the American Left.” - Andrea Friedman, American Historical Review
“Sojourning for Freedom inserts Communism into the historiography of black women’s activism. Providing a bridge between the black women’s club movement and Pan-Africanism, and later civil rights and black feminist activism, Erik S. McDuffie speaks to the historical continuity of protest strategies and concerns, such as internationalism. Drawing on his thorough research and original interviews, he makes a significant contribution toward a more complex history of black struggle.”—Kimberly Springer, author of Living for the Revolution: Black Feminist Organizations, 1968–1980
“Erik S. McDuffie does more than introduce us to a fascinating group of black left feminists in the U.S. Communist Party. He also provides a genealogy of intersectional thinking on the workings of race, class, and gender by uncovering the predecessors of black women’s movements of the 1960s and 1970s.”—Eileen Boris, co-editor of The Practice of U.S. Women’s History: Narratives, Intersections, and Dialogues
“Sojourning for Freedom is a fine scholarly work... McDuffie’s eloquent, but succinct, prose allows for easy reading… the book should spur penetrating discussions in undergraduate and graduate courses devoted to history, politics, women/gender studies, and sociology. Indeed, Sojourning for Freedom affords endless opportunities for students and professors alike to articulate interesting view-points about the black feminist ideology and American communism from the early through the middle twentieth century.”
-- Brenda I. Marshall The Griot
“Sojourning for Freedom is a groundbreaking monograph, especially for a historian’s first book. Based on impressive archival research as well as forty oral histories conducted by the author, this book will change the way historians conceptualize black women’s activism in the Old Left and the New Left.”
-- Anne Meis Knupfer Journal of American History
“Sojourning for Freedom is an excellent primer on the communist party and the Cold War in the United States as it relates to the eye-opening participation and motivations of black left feminists. It should be required reading in undergraduate and graduate courses covering this content area, as well as appealing to a general reading audience.”
-- Dolita Cathcart History: Reviews of New Books
“[I]lluminate[s] the ways that gender, race, and class intersected to shape the American Left.”
-- Andrea Friedman American Historical Review
“By the end of Sojourning for Freedom, black left feminism appears not as a reaction to Moynihan and masculinism in the 1960s, but as an intergenerational radical tradition that forged critiques of gendered racial capitalism in the previous century, before providing an influential framework for thinking about the interlocking of oppressions for our own era. But enough of this review. Go and read this very valuable book for yourself!”
-- John J. Munro H-1960s H-Net Reviews
“Radical black women had to challenge both the CP's sexism and its racism, and McDuffie provides a judicious and finely tuned analysis of black women's complicated relationship with the Party. . . . One of the great breakthroughs of McDuffie's book is his careful examination of personal testimonies, which like any narratives, demand analysis.”
-- Mary Helen Washington Women's Review of Books
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations xiii
Introduction 1
1. Black Communist Women Pioneers, 1919–1930 25
2. Searching for the Soviet Promise, Fighting for Scottsboro and Harlem's Survival, 1930–1935 58
3. Toward a Brighter Dawn: Black Women Forge the Popular Front, 1935–1940 91
4. Racing against Jim Crow, Fascism, Colonialism, and the Communist Party, 1940–1946 126
5. "We Are Sojourners for Our Rights": The Cold War, 1946–1956 160
6. Ruptures and Continuities, 1956 Onward 193
Notes 221
Bibliography 261
Index 297
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
Sojourning for Freedom: Black Women, American Communism, and the Making of Black Left Feminism
by Erik S. McDuffie
Duke University Press, 2011 Paper: 978-0-8223-5050-7 eISBN: 978-0-8223-9440-2 Cloth: 978-0-8223-5033-0
Sojourning for Freedom portrays pioneering black women activists from the early twentieth century through the 1970s, focusing on their participation in the U.S. Communist Party (CPUSA) between 1919 and 1956. Erik S. McDuffie considers how women from diverse locales and backgrounds became radicalized, joined the CPUSA, and advocated a pathbreaking politics committed to black liberation, women’s rights, decolonization, economic justice, peace, and international solidarity. McDuffie explores the lives of black left feminists, including the bohemian world traveler Louise Thompson Patterson, who wrote about the “triple exploitation” of race, gender, and class; Esther Cooper Jackson, an Alabama-based civil rights activist who chronicled the experiences of black female domestic workers; and Claudia Jones, the Trinidad-born activist who emerged as one of the Communist Party’s leading theorists of black women’s exploitation. Drawing on more than forty oral histories collected from veteran black women radicals and their family members, McDuffie examines how these women negotiated race, gender, class, sexuality, and politics within the CPUSA. In Sojourning for Freedom, he depicts a community of radical black women activist intellectuals who helped to lay the foundation for a transnational modern black feminism.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Erik S. McDuffie is Associate Professor of African American Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
REVIEWS
“Radical black women had to challenge both the CP's sexism and its racism, and McDuffie provides a judicious and finely tuned analysis of black
women's complicated relationship with the Party. . . . One of the great breakthroughs of McDuffie's book is his careful examination of personal testimonies, which like any narratives, demand analysis.” - Mary Helen Washington, Women’s Review of Books
“By the end of Sojourning for Freedom, black left feminism appears not as a reaction to Moynihan and masculinism in the 1960s, but as an intergenerational radical tradition that forged critiques of gendered racial capitalism in the previous century, before providing an influential framework for thinking about the interlocking of oppressions for our own era. But enough of this review. Go and read this very valuable book for yourself!” - John J. Munro, H-1960s, H-Net Reviews
“Sojourning for Freedom is a groundbreaking monograph, especially for a historian’s first book. Based on impressive archival research as well as forty oral histories conducted by the author, this book will change the way historians conceptualize black women’s activism in the Old Left and the New Left.” - Anne Meis Knupfer, Journal of American History
“Sojourning for Freedom is a fine scholarly work... McDuffie’s eloquent, but succinct, prose allows for easy reading… the book should spur penetrating discussions in undergraduate and graduate courses devoted to history, politics, women/gender studies, and sociology. Indeed, Sojourning for Freedom affords endless opportunities for students and professors alike to articulate interesting view-points about the black feminist ideology and American communism from the early through the middle twentieth century.” - Brenda I. Marshall, The Griot: The Journal of African American Studies
“Sojourning for Freedom is an excellent primer on the communist party and
the Cold War in the United States as it relates to the eye-opening participation and motivations of black left feminists. It should be required reading in undergraduate and graduate courses covering this content area, as well as appealing to a general reading audience.” - Dolita Cathcart, History: Reviews of New Books
“[I]lluminate[s] the ways that gender, race, and class intersected to shape the American Left.” - Andrea Friedman, American Historical Review
“Sojourning for Freedom inserts Communism into the historiography of black women’s activism. Providing a bridge between the black women’s club movement and Pan-Africanism, and later civil rights and black feminist activism, Erik S. McDuffie speaks to the historical continuity of protest strategies and concerns, such as internationalism. Drawing on his thorough research and original interviews, he makes a significant contribution toward a more complex history of black struggle.”—Kimberly Springer, author of Living for the Revolution: Black Feminist Organizations, 1968–1980
“Erik S. McDuffie does more than introduce us to a fascinating group of black left feminists in the U.S. Communist Party. He also provides a genealogy of intersectional thinking on the workings of race, class, and gender by uncovering the predecessors of black women’s movements of the 1960s and 1970s.”—Eileen Boris, co-editor of The Practice of U.S. Women’s History: Narratives, Intersections, and Dialogues
“Sojourning for Freedom is a fine scholarly work... McDuffie’s eloquent, but succinct, prose allows for easy reading… the book should spur penetrating discussions in undergraduate and graduate courses devoted to history, politics, women/gender studies, and sociology. Indeed, Sojourning for Freedom affords endless opportunities for students and professors alike to articulate interesting view-points about the black feminist ideology and American communism from the early through the middle twentieth century.”
-- Brenda I. Marshall The Griot
“Sojourning for Freedom is a groundbreaking monograph, especially for a historian’s first book. Based on impressive archival research as well as forty oral histories conducted by the author, this book will change the way historians conceptualize black women’s activism in the Old Left and the New Left.”
-- Anne Meis Knupfer Journal of American History
“Sojourning for Freedom is an excellent primer on the communist party and the Cold War in the United States as it relates to the eye-opening participation and motivations of black left feminists. It should be required reading in undergraduate and graduate courses covering this content area, as well as appealing to a general reading audience.”
-- Dolita Cathcart History: Reviews of New Books
“[I]lluminate[s] the ways that gender, race, and class intersected to shape the American Left.”
-- Andrea Friedman American Historical Review
“By the end of Sojourning for Freedom, black left feminism appears not as a reaction to Moynihan and masculinism in the 1960s, but as an intergenerational radical tradition that forged critiques of gendered racial capitalism in the previous century, before providing an influential framework for thinking about the interlocking of oppressions for our own era. But enough of this review. Go and read this very valuable book for yourself!”
-- John J. Munro H-1960s H-Net Reviews
“Radical black women had to challenge both the CP's sexism and its racism, and McDuffie provides a judicious and finely tuned analysis of black women's complicated relationship with the Party. . . . One of the great breakthroughs of McDuffie's book is his careful examination of personal testimonies, which like any narratives, demand analysis.”
-- Mary Helen Washington Women's Review of Books
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations xiii
Introduction 1
1. Black Communist Women Pioneers, 1919–1930 25
2. Searching for the Soviet Promise, Fighting for Scottsboro and Harlem's Survival, 1930–1935 58
3. Toward a Brighter Dawn: Black Women Forge the Popular Front, 1935–1940 91
4. Racing against Jim Crow, Fascism, Colonialism, and the Communist Party, 1940–1946 126
5. "We Are Sojourners for Our Rights": The Cold War, 1946–1956 160
6. Ruptures and Continuities, 1956 Onward 193
Notes 221
Bibliography 261
Index 297
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE