E
Erik S. McDuffie
Researcher at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
Publications - 19
Citations - 396
Erik S. McDuffie is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The author has contributed to research in topics: Politics & Feminism. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 19 publications receiving 379 citations.
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Sojourning for Freedom: Black Women, American Communism, and the Making of Black Left Feminism
TL;DR: McDuffie as discussed by the authors portrayed pioneering black women activists from the early twentieth century through the 1970s, focusing on their participation in the U.S. Communist Party (CPUSA) between 1919 and 1956.
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Esther V. Cooper's “The Negro Woman Domestic Worker in Relation to Trade Unionism”: Black Left Feminism and the Popular Front
TL;DR: Cooper's "The Negro Woman Domestic Worker in Relation to Trade Unionism" as discussed by the authors is the most thorough sociological and historical study written about domestic workers in the United States.
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‘I wanted a Communist philosophy, but I wanted us to have a chance to organize our people’: the diasporic radicalism of Queen Mother Audley Moore and the origins of black power
TL;DR: Moore was one of the most revered figures in twentieth-century black nationalism, Pan-Africanism, and Communism, and she was central in forging 1960s-era Black Power and the modern reparations movement as mentioned in this paper.
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A “New Freedom Movement of Negro Women”: Sojourning for Truth, Justice, and Human Rights during the Early Cold War
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Chicago, Garveyism, and the history of the diasporic Midwest
TL;DR: In this paper, the dynamic history of Garveyism in Chicago, Illinois (USA) is analyzed, where the Jamaican black nationalist Marcus Garvey's message of racial pride, African redemption, and black self-determination electrified black Chicagoans.