Solidarities found and lost
Feb. 24th, 2022 12:20 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
BDSA’s SocFem WG and AfroSoc are co-hosting a reading group on Angela Davis’ Women, Race & Class, which I bought from the LPC a while ago. I figured this would then be a good time to move it from the unread nonfiction shelf to the read nonfiction shelf, even though the discussion is only on one chapter. It’s not a very long book, and I’m a completist.
Each of the 13 chapters has a tightly focused subject and the book as a whole reads like 13 essays rather than… well, rather than a book as a whole. This is fine–lots of great books are compilations of essays–but it wasn’t what I was expecting going into it. Angela Davis is a very good short-form political writer; she’s easy to read, and her essays are always information-dense and reasonably jargon-light.
The subject of the book is exactly what it says on the tin. Each essay chronicles a portion of the rocky histories of the various women’s, Black liberation, and labor movements, starting with white women’s role in the abolitionist movement before the Civil War and continuing up to the contemporary hot topics when the book was published in the early ‘80s. Special focus is given to the forging and deterioration of solidarity between different issues and demographics among and across movements, highlighting the gains that could be won when people supported one another and the weakness and fissures that develop in movements when they fall prey to supremacist thinking. Some of the history covered here I think has been mainstreamed a little since publication, but much of it is still rarely discussed outside of Angela Davis reading groups.
Some particularly thought-provoking subjects covered: The history of Margaret Sanger’s involvement in the socialist movement, before she quit the Socialist Party to chase eugenics money; the racial complications of the “wages for housework” movement; the history of abortion and infanticide among enslaved women and its implications for the reproductive rights movement; the legacy of the myth of the black rapist among white anti-rape feminists; everything about Ida B. Wells.
The chapter we’re discussing tonight, “Chapter 5: The Meaning of Emancipation According to Black Women,” is only seven pages long, but covers a range of subjects regarding Black women and labor, and should provoke a solid amount of discussion. I’m looking forward to it.
Each of the 13 chapters has a tightly focused subject and the book as a whole reads like 13 essays rather than… well, rather than a book as a whole. This is fine–lots of great books are compilations of essays–but it wasn’t what I was expecting going into it. Angela Davis is a very good short-form political writer; she’s easy to read, and her essays are always information-dense and reasonably jargon-light.
The subject of the book is exactly what it says on the tin. Each essay chronicles a portion of the rocky histories of the various women’s, Black liberation, and labor movements, starting with white women’s role in the abolitionist movement before the Civil War and continuing up to the contemporary hot topics when the book was published in the early ‘80s. Special focus is given to the forging and deterioration of solidarity between different issues and demographics among and across movements, highlighting the gains that could be won when people supported one another and the weakness and fissures that develop in movements when they fall prey to supremacist thinking. Some of the history covered here I think has been mainstreamed a little since publication, but much of it is still rarely discussed outside of Angela Davis reading groups.
Some particularly thought-provoking subjects covered: The history of Margaret Sanger’s involvement in the socialist movement, before she quit the Socialist Party to chase eugenics money; the racial complications of the “wages for housework” movement; the history of abortion and infanticide among enslaved women and its implications for the reproductive rights movement; the legacy of the myth of the black rapist among white anti-rape feminists; everything about Ida B. Wells.
The chapter we’re discussing tonight, “Chapter 5: The Meaning of Emancipation According to Black Women,” is only seven pages long, but covers a range of subjects regarding Black women and labor, and should provoke a solid amount of discussion. I’m looking forward to it.