The Obscured and Forgotten History of Black Communist Women

At a time when organizing by leftists, particularly Black women, faces numerous challenges in politics, public schools, and the media, it can feel as though a dark history is repeating itself. Concerns about the rising alt-right, police violence, anti-trans legislation, book banning, and the erasure of “uncomfortable” histories are colliding with reinvigorated anti-racism and pro-labor movements. This year alone, we saw what Amazon union organizer Chris Smalls called the “Hot Labor Summer”: an ongoing wave of strikes and unionization efforts from giant corporations such as Starbucks, to museums, rail yards, and coal mining facilities. While seemingly newly urgent, the fights for racial justice, gender equity, and workers’ rights began decades ago. A new collection of Black women’s writing—Organize, Fight, Win—brings to light to the theories and tactics activists used to build successful coalition movements at the beginning of the 20th century, and their enduring relevance in today’s political climate.

The anthology, compiled and edited by Charisse Burden-Stelly and Jodi Dean, professors of Africana studies and of political, feminist, and media theory, respectively, collects and celebrates the work of radical Black women who organized for political and labor-related purposes. Many of the women featured in the book were key members of, or connected to, the Communist Party of the United States, working between the Red Summer of 1919, when racist and anti-communist riots swept through major US cities, and the beginnings of the Red Scare in the 1950s. For these women, communism represented an opportunity to build interracial, gender-inclusive, and working-class solidarity in the face of metastasizing fascism and segregation. However, because of the US government’s attempts to tie communism to disloyalty, much of these women’s work went unrecognized in mainstream histories of Black activism, particularly in the decades before the civil rights movement.

Organized chronologically, Organize, Fight, Win serves as a historical catalog of significant political writing, journalistic investigations, union organizing, and protest work Black women engaged in despite constant threats to their safety and livelihoods. The anthology is composed of articles, speeches, and reports produced by well-known activists, organizers, and writers such as Louise Thompson Patterson and Claudia Jones, who remained politically active well into the 1960s, as well as lesser-known women such as Maude White Katz, one of the first Black women to study abroad in the USSR.

Burden-Stelly and Dean frame the collection as both a corrective for American history’s mistakes, and as a call to action for activists in our present moment. We talked about the making of their book during the pandemic, how to broaden sites of knowledge production, and the impact of intellectual McCarthyism, then and now. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

—Morgan Forde

Morgan Forde: In your introduction to Organize, Fight, Win, you talk about organizing this project during the early days of the pandemic. How did you connect and what was your collaboration process like?

Jodi Dean: Charisse and I met at Red May, which is a kind of communist extravaganza held in Seattle every year, organized by Philip Wohlstedder. Then I was teaching a course on socialist feminism and one of my students was looking for a text by Louise Thompson Patterson from the 1930s. She couldn’t find it, and then I started to look around and I also couldn’t find it. So I contacted Charisse, because Charisse has copies of everything—really an amazing archive—and it turns out she didn’t have it. Charisse started asking people and nobody had it, and at this point, it seemed like: OK, not only do we have to find this, but it shouldn’t be this hard. It shouldn’t be this hard to find writing by these really important Black, female, communist organizers. This needs to be a collection.


source site

Leave a Reply