We Were There
The Third World Women's Alliance and the Second Wave
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
"Fifty years ago, the Third World Women’s Alliance passionately insisted on interconnections among racism, sexism, and capitalism, inspiring radical analytical frameworks and organizing strategies associated with contemporary conceptions of feminism. We are deeply indebted to Patricia Romney for helping to generate a record of the Alliance’s pioneering contributions and thus for ensuring that their revolutionary legacies live on." —Angela Y. Davis, author of Freedom Is a Constant Struggle
From 1970 to 1980, the Third World Women’s Alliance lived the dream of third world feminism. The small bicoastal organization was one of the earliest groups advocating for what came to be known as intersectional activism, arguing that women of color faced a “triple jeopardy” of race, gender, and class oppression. Rooted in the Black civil rights movement, the TWWA pushed the women’s movement to address issues such as sterilization abuse, infant mortality, welfare, and wage exploitation, and challenged third world activist organizations to address sexism in their ranks. Widely recognized as the era’s primary voice for women of color, this alliance across ethnic and racial identities was unique then and now.
Interweaving oral history, scholarly and archival research, and first-person memoir, We Were There documents how the TWWA shaped and defined second wave feminism. Highlighting the essential contributions of women of color to the justice movements of the 1970s, this historical resource will inspire activists today and tomorrow, reminding a new generation that solidarity is the only way forward.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Psychologist and activist Romney (coeditor, Understanding Power) delivers a comprehensive insider history of the Third World Women's Alliance (TWWA), a feminist organization that was active from 1970 to 1980. Romney details the group's emergence from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and its development into an intersectional, multicultural, and sisterhood-centered organization for working-class Black, Latina, Asian, and Middle Eastern women who comprised America's "third world." She also describes the consciousness-raising, self-educational process by which members learned about Marxist socialism, international liberation movements, and their own bodies, and highlights the TWWA journal Triple Jeopardy, which published hundreds of articles at a time when nonwhite women's writing had few outlets. Profiles of former members reveal how their early experiences with TWWA led to a lifetime of activism as writers, educators, policy advocates, and mothers fighting for better lives for their children. Throughout, an appealing sense of nostalgia enriches Romney's argument that these "womanists, internationalists, anti-racist activists, and leftists" made significant contributions to second-wave feminism. This richly documented account rescues a critical chapter in the history of the feminist movement from obscurity.