This thesis identifies feminized labor in white nationalist organizing in North Carolina in the late 1970s and early 1980s and argues that this labor was essential in orchestrating the Greensboro Massacre and its aftermath. Feminized labor is represented by the work of the women of North Carolina’s United Racist Front who were critical in coordinating and recruiting between multiple white nationalist organizations, implementing a public relations strategy, and fundraising for legal fees and other costs. The Greensboro Massacre was a turning point for contemporary white nationalist organizing and the impact of feminized labor on the white nationalist movement was a pivotal factor in contemporary organizing.Master of Art
This thesis documents the struggle of the Lincoln, Nebraska Young Women’s Christian Association (YWC...
From 1880 to 1898 the working class black women of Wilmington, North Carolina forged a politics of r...
This thesis is an exploration of feminist thought in the radical Left circles of postwar America pr...
The Lost Cause is a pseudohistorical narrative created in the Southern United States to justify the ...
This dissertation examines a symbol central to the racial consciousness of the contemporary United S...
This thesis explores the construction of white supremacy through a close study of Ku Klux Klan viole...
The Ku Klux Klan is often thought of as a male-dominated organization; however there is evidence tha...
In the 1970s, labor, civil rights activists, feminists, religious leaders, and mill workers united i...
This thesis focuses on the final years of the Southern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF), including...
Gender, race, and class are concepts that define the lived experiences of Black women in the United ...
During the 1930s, the Popular Front mobilized the American working class and reignited the flame of ...
textThis report explores the role of documentary art in the constitution of collective memory in Gre...
This thesis examines the organizing projects of the Chicago Women\u27s Liberation Union from 1969-19...
In this historical study I used written and oral archival sources to explore the experiences of Blac...
(Statement of Responsibility) by Leen Alfatafta(Thesis) Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of Florida, 2...
This thesis documents the struggle of the Lincoln, Nebraska Young Women’s Christian Association (YWC...
From 1880 to 1898 the working class black women of Wilmington, North Carolina forged a politics of r...
This thesis is an exploration of feminist thought in the radical Left circles of postwar America pr...
The Lost Cause is a pseudohistorical narrative created in the Southern United States to justify the ...
This dissertation examines a symbol central to the racial consciousness of the contemporary United S...
This thesis explores the construction of white supremacy through a close study of Ku Klux Klan viole...
The Ku Klux Klan is often thought of as a male-dominated organization; however there is evidence tha...
In the 1970s, labor, civil rights activists, feminists, religious leaders, and mill workers united i...
This thesis focuses on the final years of the Southern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF), including...
Gender, race, and class are concepts that define the lived experiences of Black women in the United ...
During the 1930s, the Popular Front mobilized the American working class and reignited the flame of ...
textThis report explores the role of documentary art in the constitution of collective memory in Gre...
This thesis examines the organizing projects of the Chicago Women\u27s Liberation Union from 1969-19...
In this historical study I used written and oral archival sources to explore the experiences of Blac...
(Statement of Responsibility) by Leen Alfatafta(Thesis) Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of Florida, 2...
This thesis documents the struggle of the Lincoln, Nebraska Young Women’s Christian Association (YWC...
From 1880 to 1898 the working class black women of Wilmington, North Carolina forged a politics of r...
This thesis is an exploration of feminist thought in the radical Left circles of postwar America pr...