Titel
A feminist becoming? Louise Thompson Patterson’s and Dorothy West’s sojourn in the Soviet Union
Abstract
This article follows the socialist activist Louise Thompson (later Patterson) and the writer Dorothy West on their infamous journey to Soviet Russia to shoot a film about North American anti-Black racism in 1932. The film about the US history of racial oppression was ultimately never made, but the women stayed in the Soviet Union for several months, travelling to the Soviet republics, meeting famous Soviets, and experiencing Soviet modernization. Looking at the travel writings, correspondence, and memoirs of Thompson and West through the lens of intersectionality, this article analyses the women’s distinctly gendered experiences and their experience of socialist women’s liberation movements. It argues that a close reading of the literary writing, travel notes, letters, and memoirs and their biographical trajectories after they returned to the United States reveals how their experiences in the Soviet Union created a feminist consciousness within the two women that crucially altered their political and personal views of Black women’s agency and significantly altered their life trajectories.
Stichwort
African-AmericanRussiaUSSRCommunismFeminismWomen’s liberationSexualityLiteratureHarlem Renaissance
Objekt-Typ
Sprache
Englisch [eng]
Erschienen in
Titel
Feminismo/s
Ausgabe
36
ISSN
1989-9998
Erscheinungsdatum
2020
Seitenanfang
103
Seitenende
128
Publication
Universidad de Alicante Servicio de Publicaciones
Projekt
Kod / Identifikator
V 741
Erscheinungsdatum
2020
Zugänglichkeit
Rechteangabe
© Katharina Wiedlack

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