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VOL. 21

Imagining Revolutionary Feminism: Communist Asia and the Women of the Black Panther Party

Benjamin R. Young

DOI: Pending

Abstract

Using newspapers, autobiographies, and interviews, this article examines the ways in which women of the Black Panther Party imagined the women of Vietnam, China, and North Korea as radical archetypes during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Using Judy Wus theory of radical orientalismin conversation with Ashley Farmers concept of the gendered imaginary,I argue that the Panther women imagined the women of the Eastas pioneers in world revolution and womens liberation in order to protest against gendered injustices within the Party and broader U.S. society. This article also investigates the realities on the ground for the women of Communist Asia and the ways in which the patriarchy preserved itself despite the social revolutions of these three MarxistLeninist governments.

Keywords

Asia, Black Panther Party, Black internationalism, China, feminism, North Korea, Vietnam

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