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Cold War Progressives - Women's Interracial Organizing for Peace and Freedom (Hardcover)
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Cold War Progressives - Women's Interracial Organizing for Peace and Freedom (Hardcover)
Series: Women, Gender, and Sexuality in American History
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In recognizing the relation between gender, race, and class
oppression, American women of the postwar Progressive Party made
the claim that peace required not merely the absence of violence,
but also the presence of social and political equality. For
progressive women, peace was the essential thread that connected
the various aspects of their activist agendas. This study maps the
routes taken by postwar popular front women activists into peace
and freedom movements of the 1960s and 1970s. Historian Jacqueline
Castledine tells the story of their decades-long effort to keep
their intertwined social and political causes from unraveling and
to maintain the connections among peace, feminism, and racial
equality. Postwar progressive women and their allies often
saw themselves as members of a popular front promoting the rights
of workers, women, and African Americans under the banner of peace.
However, the Cold War indelibly shaped the contours of their
activism. Following the Progressive Party's demise in the 1950s,
these activists reentered social and political movements in the
early 1960s and met the inescapable reality that their agenda was a
casualty of the left-liberal political division of the early Cold
War era. Many Americans now viewed peace as a leftist concern
associated with Soviet sympathizers and civil rights as the favored
cause of liberals. Faced with the dilemma of working to reunite
these movements or choosing between them, some progressive women
chose to lead such New Left organizations as the Jeannette Rankin
Brigade while others became leaders of liberal "second wave"
feminist movements. Whether they committed to affiliating
with groups that emphasized one issue over others or attempted to
found groups with broad popular-front type agendas, Progressive
women brought to their later work an understanding of how race,
class, and gender intersect in women's organizing. These women's
stories demonstrate that the ultimate result of Cold War-era
McCarthyism was not the defeat of women's activism, but rather its
reconfiguration.
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