American Radical Movements
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  • New Negroes
    • Chapter 1: The Great Debate
    • Chapter 2: African-Americans in the Era of The Great War
    • Chapter 3: Hubert H. Harrison, the Father of Harlem Radicalism
    • Chapter 4: The Descent of DuBois
    • Chapter 5: The Great War, Black Radicalism and the Launching of The Messenger
    • Chapter 6: The MESSENGER'S Philosophy of Interracial Socialism
    • Chapter 7: The MESSENGER Challenges Afro-American Values and Institutions
    • Chapter 8: Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association
    • Chapter 9: The Great Divide: The Break Between the Afro-American Socialists and Nationalists
    • Chapter 10: Garvey's Rightward Lurch
    • Chapter 11: Cyril Briggs, THE CRUSADER, and The African Blood Brotherhood
    • Chapter 12: Garvey and the Black Radicals
    • Chapter 13: Du Bois, Garvey, and the Radicals
    • Chapter 14: A Tactical Retreat: Randolph and The Messenger in the Mid-1920's
    • Chapter 15: The Failure of a Dream: Claude McKay and the White Radicals
    • Chapter 16: The Radicals Confront the Jazz Age: Conservatives, Radicals, and the Harlem Renaissance
    • Chapter 17: The Legacy and Failure of the Black Radicals
  • Margaret Anderson
  • Emma Goldman
    • Introduction
    • Chapter 1
    • Chapter 2
    • Chapter 3
    • Conclusion
  • IWW
    • Part 1
    • Part 2
  • Max Eastman
    • 1. Max Eastman's Life Project
    • 2. Eastman as a Social Revolutionary
    • 3. Literature, Art, and Revolution
    • 4. Cultural Revolution
    • 5. Problems of the Counterculture
    • 6. Eastman and the Middle Class
    • 7. The Masses and the Great War
    • 8. Eastman, The Liberator, and the War
    • 9. Eastman and the Bolshevik Revolution
    • 10. Towards an American Revolution
    • 11. Intelligentsia and Revolution
    • 12. Feminism and Racial Egalitarianism in an Age of Upheaval
    • 13. Important Addition
  • The New Women
    • 1. THE CONDTION OF AMERICAN WOMEN IN 1907
    • 2. THE FEMINIST-SOCIALIST PROJECT
    • 3. A SPECIAL APPEAL TO WOMEN
    • 4. WHY WOMEN SHOULD BE SOCIALISTS
    • 5. WHY MALE SOCIALISTS SHOULD BE FEMINISTS
    • 6. THE SOCIALIST WOMEN'S ATTACK ON TRADITIONAL VALUES: RELIGION, PATRIOTISM, CAPITALIST DEMOCRACY, AND POPULAR CULTURE
    • 7. THE SOCIALIST WOMEN'S ATTACK ON TRADITIONAL VALUES: MARRIAGE, FAMILY, AND THE HOME
    • 8. THE SOCIALIST WOMEN AND THE SEX STRUGGLE
    • 9. CULTURAL REVOLUTION WITHIN THE SOCIALIST PARTY
    • 10. PORTENT OF DISASTER: THE SOCIALIST WOMAN AND SPECIAL PROTECTIVE LEGISLATION
    • 11. THE ACHIEVEMENTS AND FAILURES OF THE SOCIALIST WOMEN
    • 12. CRYSTAL EASTMAN AND THE DIVORCE OF SOCIALISM AND FEMINISM
    • 13. KATE RICHARDS O'HARE AS A SOCIALIST-FEMINIST
    • 14. O'HARE AS ANTI-WAR ACTIVIST AND POLITICAL PRISONER
    • 15. SOCIALISM AND GENDER INEQUALITY IN ONE COMMUNITY: O'HARE, LLANO COMMUNITY, AND THE END OF SOCIALIST FEMINISM
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  • Home
  • New Negroes
    • Chapter 1: The Great Debate
    • Chapter 2: African-Americans in the Era of The Great War
    • Chapter 3: Hubert H. Harrison, the Father of Harlem Radicalism
    • Chapter 4: The Descent of DuBois
    • Chapter 5: The Great War, Black Radicalism and the Launching of The Messenger
    • Chapter 6: The MESSENGER'S Philosophy of Interracial Socialism
    • Chapter 7: The MESSENGER Challenges Afro-American Values and Institutions
    • Chapter 8: Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association
    • Chapter 9: The Great Divide: The Break Between the Afro-American Socialists and Nationalists
    • Chapter 10: Garvey's Rightward Lurch
    • Chapter 11: Cyril Briggs, THE CRUSADER, and The African Blood Brotherhood
    • Chapter 12: Garvey and the Black Radicals
    • Chapter 13: Du Bois, Garvey, and the Radicals
    • Chapter 14: A Tactical Retreat: Randolph and The Messenger in the Mid-1920's
    • Chapter 15: The Failure of a Dream: Claude McKay and the White Radicals
    • Chapter 16: The Radicals Confront the Jazz Age: Conservatives, Radicals, and the Harlem Renaissance
    • Chapter 17: The Legacy and Failure of the Black Radicals
  • Margaret Anderson
  • Emma Goldman
    • Introduction
    • Chapter 1
    • Chapter 2
    • Chapter 3
    • Conclusion
  • IWW
    • Part 1
    • Part 2
  • Max Eastman
    • 1. Max Eastman's Life Project
    • 2. Eastman as a Social Revolutionary
    • 3. Literature, Art, and Revolution
    • 4. Cultural Revolution
    • 5. Problems of the Counterculture
    • 6. Eastman and the Middle Class
    • 7. The Masses and the Great War
    • 8. Eastman, The Liberator, and the War
    • 9. Eastman and the Bolshevik Revolution
    • 10. Towards an American Revolution
    • 11. Intelligentsia and Revolution
    • 12. Feminism and Racial Egalitarianism in an Age of Upheaval
    • 13. Important Addition
  • The New Women
    • 1. THE CONDTION OF AMERICAN WOMEN IN 1907
    • 2. THE FEMINIST-SOCIALIST PROJECT
    • 3. A SPECIAL APPEAL TO WOMEN
    • 4. WHY WOMEN SHOULD BE SOCIALISTS
    • 5. WHY MALE SOCIALISTS SHOULD BE FEMINISTS
    • 6. THE SOCIALIST WOMEN'S ATTACK ON TRADITIONAL VALUES: RELIGION, PATRIOTISM, CAPITALIST DEMOCRACY, AND POPULAR CULTURE
    • 7. THE SOCIALIST WOMEN'S ATTACK ON TRADITIONAL VALUES: MARRIAGE, FAMILY, AND THE HOME
    • 8. THE SOCIALIST WOMEN AND THE SEX STRUGGLE
    • 9. CULTURAL REVOLUTION WITHIN THE SOCIALIST PARTY
    • 10. PORTENT OF DISASTER: THE SOCIALIST WOMAN AND SPECIAL PROTECTIVE LEGISLATION
    • 11. THE ACHIEVEMENTS AND FAILURES OF THE SOCIALIST WOMEN
    • 12. CRYSTAL EASTMAN AND THE DIVORCE OF SOCIALISM AND FEMINISM
    • 13. KATE RICHARDS O'HARE AS A SOCIALIST-FEMINIST
    • 14. O'HARE AS ANTI-WAR ACTIVIST AND POLITICAL PRISONER
    • 15. SOCIALISM AND GENDER INEQUALITY IN ONE COMMUNITY: O'HARE, LLANO COMMUNITY, AND THE END OF SOCIALIST FEMINISM
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