Abstract
The sociopolitical conditions and social movements of the late 1960s gave rise to an unprecedented growth in Black feminist consciousness that is reflected in contemporary feminist theorizing. Anthologies such as The Black Woman and Homegirls: A Black Feminist Anthology gave voice to Black feminists' alienation from the sexism, racism, and classism found in the civil rights movement, the women's movement, social policy, and popular culture (see Bambara 1970 and Smith 1983). However, we know little about the formal organizations resulting from the rise in Black feminist consciousness.
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