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    1. We Are All Bound Up Together: Race and Resistance in the American Women’s Suffrage Movement - The De

      We Are All Bound Up Together: Race and Resistance in the American Women’s Suffrage Movement - The Devil's Tale Primary (...)

    2. Resistance is Futile - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Resistance is Futile - Scholarly Communications @ Duke Primary Menu Skip to content About What we do For Faculty Authors Copyright in (...)

    3. Resistance through Community: Prison Zines in the Twenty-First Century - The Devil's Tale

      Much of the earlier period looked at in my work has been focused on the Black Power movement, and the use of solitary confinement, (...)

    4. Abolition, Racism, and Resistance · Beyond Supply & Demand: Duke Economics Students Present 100 Year

      Abolition, Racism, and Resistance · Beyond Supply & Demand: Duke Economics Students Present 100 Years of American Women’s Suffrage · (...)

    5. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/rubenstein/pdf/womenatthecenter/wc-38.pdf

      The students were committed to studying all ten theme areas through the lens of race and resistance because, though much of the current (...)

    6. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/rubenstein/users/john.gartrell/Travel%20Grant%20A (...)

      Niera Marshall, Indiana University, for research on women's resistance in the lowcountry from 1820 to 1860. Danielle McGuire, Rutgers (...)

    7. Bibliography | Duke University Libraries

      E. (2001). Student Resistance: A History of the Unruly Subject . Routledge. 

    8. RL Magazine | Duke University Libraries

      Scarborough and the Scarborough Nursery School Guiding Principles for Description We Are All Bound Up Together: Race and Resistance in (...)

    9. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/dul/users/megan.crain/Todd.pdf

      O’Brien, Kevin J., and Lianjiang Li. Rightful Resistance in Rural China. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006. 45.

    10. Success of the Second Sex: Duke University’s Demonstrated Efforts to Empower Women

      In 1963, Duke admitted its first African American undergraduates, but it hadn’t yet integrated the men’s and women’s campuses.2 The segregation (...)

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