1-20 of 197 Search Results for

white supremacy

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2022) 2022 (143): 79–88.
Published: 01 May 2022
...Ebun Joseph Abstract Despite the Irish experience of white-on-white racism, can any predominantly white country in the global North be free of white supremacy? It has been argued that the Irish became white. What was the cost of becoming white? What does Ireland endorse in accepting this construct...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1984) 1984 (28-30): 393–405.
Published: 01 May 1984
...Fredrick Cooper 1984 THE PAST IN PRINT White Supremacy in South Africa and the United States...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2019) 2019 (135): 138–159.
Published: 01 October 2019
... violence to carcerality, neoliberal capitalism, white supremacy, settler colonialism, and fascism. Copyright © 2019 by MARHO: The Radical Historians’ Organization, Inc. 2019 sanctuary migrants activists sanctuary activism This roundtable focuses on the concept of sanctuary in different...
FIGURES | View All (7)
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2020) 2020 (138): 60–81.
Published: 01 October 2020
... on influences from Black Power, Women’s Liberation, and Marxism to connect fascism to everyday oppression under capitalism, white supremacy, and heteropatriarchy. Using oral histories, private collections, and against-the-grain archival research, this article is the first transnational study of queer anti...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2009) 2009 (103): 59–81.
Published: 01 January 2009
... of masculine blackness held a particular appeal for the dark proletariat. While not explicitly political, black boxers publicly embodied a New Negro masculinity grounded in working-class sensibilities that influenced the radical critiques of white supremacy later forwarded by black intellectuals and artists...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1998) 1998 (71): 34–40.
Published: 01 May 1998
... an examination of “blackness.” But it is becoming increasingly diffi- cult to ignore the burgeoning scholarship on ”whiteness”-a body of work that, if taken seriously, could also aid in the unpacking of ”white supremacy;” for race privilege particularly has been a major stumbling block in forging viable...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1993) 1993 (56): 107–108.
Published: 01 May 1993
... cultures and develop- ing movements and literatures to resist the hegemony of white supremacy in the modern world. Increasing attention is devoted to the process by which African Americans became a particular people in the United States; in this regard I draw upon the approaches developed...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1994) 1994 (59): 4–35.
Published: 01 May 1994
... from Indians and of the booty of empire. In the end, the only advantage for most has been the color of their skin and the white supremacy, particularly toward African Americans, that pervades the culture; what they are not (black, Asian, ”foreign”) is as important as what...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2002) 2002 (84): 115–118.
Published: 01 October 2002
... the voices of historical actors in their roles of shaping the historical narrative itself. On the face of it, the exercise might tend to lessen the remarkable powers of creative resistance and to focus more so on the language of white supremacy in constituting “black...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2014) 2014 (119): 72–93.
Published: 01 May 2014
... glimpsed firsthand the poverty and brutality of the apartheid system. In a telling letter home Lee underlined his dismay at the racial situation in South Africa, con- cluding that “for the Natives, it is as bad as our South — only worse.”2 Lee was a fierce critic of white supremacy. As an actor...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2012) 2012 (112): 113–125.
Published: 01 January 2012
... connects the past, present, and future in an attempt to develop the psychological force needed to build a “strong black women’s movement.”10 This is a movement that emerged amid the crises of global capitalism, white supremacy, heteropatriarchy, and state power that spanned the 1960s and 1970s...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2020) 2020 (137): 157–176.
Published: 01 May 2020
... but is part of a systematic attempt to end Black lives. The organization is unequivocal about the police acting as an arm of the state in its ongoing project of white supremacy, transecting hundreds of years and multiple periods of history. Prompted by the question “How can history help us to imagine a world...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2008) 2008 (102): 32–34.
Published: 01 October 2008
... to become willing accomplices of racial violence and white supremacy. I think both the perpetrators and their accomplices lost their humanity. Yet the reenactment reclaims the site and, like a bridge, effectively tran- scends the borderland. It successfully drags the events at Moore’s Ford from...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1999) 1999 (73): 172–184.
Published: 01 January 1999
...: Harvard University Press, 1997. $15.95 (paper). Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore, Gender and Jim Crow: Women and the Politics of White Supremacy in North Carolina, 1896-1920. Chapel Hill: Univer- sity of North Carolina Press, 1996. $17.95 (paper...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2019) 2019 (133): 131–147.
Published: 01 January 2019
..., 1880–1917 , this primary material clarifies how ideas about race and masculinity in the United States and the militarized body of white supremacy at the turn of the twentieth century depended on the colonial backdrop. 9 Most students confess to knowing very little, if anything, about Roosevelt...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2017) 2017 (127): 125–132.
Published: 01 January 2017
... wave, you know? And this is not unprecedented. You know, the sort of violence that folks saw in the 1960s, in Selma, for instance, or on Bloody Sunday, that sort of violence was not, in fact, actually new. That’s what white supremacy, what racism is. It is an act of violence. What was new...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2020) 2020 (138): 179–191.
Published: 01 October 2020
... have answered this question since the 1960s. Some of their references point to European fascism of the 1930s and 1940s, but just as frequently they relate to a history of US repression, white supremacy, and white nationalist terror that predates Hitler and Mussolini. Anti-fascists seek to limit...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2009) 2009 (103): 230–235.
Published: 01 January 2009
... of African countries and uncover how such travels positioned the Afri- can continent as a crucial site in debates over African American citizenship, white supremacy, and transnational affiliations. In addition, these works address central questions shaping African diasporic studies as they each trace...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2006) 2006 (95): 250–261.
Published: 01 May 2006
... by suggesting a political affinity between blacks and Asians as victims of white supremacy (whether European colonialism or U.S. imperialism) but also by enacting a displacement of the racially distributed vulnerability to violence that otherwise slated blacks for gratuitous assault without recourse...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2021) 2021 (141): 107–127.
Published: 01 October 2021
..., illustrates how Black gatekeepers used the press to propagate the racial lie at the heart of American politics during the era that the scholar Rayford W. Logan called “the long nadir.” 7 This was the lie that, as Booker T. Washington told the New York Times in 1900, “the only way to stop [white supremacy...