Contents
Foreword
Deborah Gray White
Preface: A Feminist Way of Being—Celebrating Nancy A. Hewitt
Paula J. Giddings
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One Searching for Sisterhood
Chapter 1 Cleaning Race: Irish Immigrant and Southern Black Domestic Workers in the Northeast United States, 1865–1930
Danielle Phillips
Chapter 2 “By Any Means Necessary”: The National Council of Negro Women’s Flexible Loyalties in the Black Power Era
Rebecca Tuuri
Chapter 3 “This Is Like Family”: Activist-Survivor Histories and Motherwork
Ariella Rotramel
Part Two Challenging Established Narratives
Chapter 4 The Maid and Mr. Charlie: Rosa Parks and the Struggle for Black Women’s Bodily Integrity
Danielle L. McGuire
Chapter 5 Cold War History as Women’s History
Jacqueline Castledine
Chapter 6 “I’m Gonna Get You”: Black Womanhood and Jim Crow Justice in the Post–Civil Rights South
Christina Greene
Part Three: Rethinking Feminism
Chapter 7 Gender Expression in Antebellum America: Accessing the Privileges and Freedoms of White Men
Jen Manion
Chapter 8 When a “Sister” Is a Mother: Maternal Thinking and Feminist Action, 1967–1980
Andrea Estepa
Chapter 9 Contested Geography: The Campaign against Pornography and the Battle for Urban Space in Minneapolis
Kirsten Delegard
Chapter 10 Remembering Together: Take Back the Night and the Public Memory of Feminism
Anne Valk
Selected Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index